Up Close and Personal with Steve Swallow
Artist Interview by: Mike Brannon
Steve Swallow may not be a household word, at least in most
households, but if you've listened to contemporary jazz over the last thirty
years, you've likely heard him on one side of the studio glass or the other.
Swallow's not just a great and very unique electric jazz bassist but also a
trusted producer of sessions which have included the likes jazz guitar icons
Metheny, Scofield, Frisell and Goodrick. Beyond this, he is also an often
covered composer in his own right (even pianist Bill Evans has recorded his
compositions) and a frequent collaborator with keyboardist, Carla Bley.
Together they have recorded and toured for years, supporting each other both
musically and personally. To write a complete discography and/or biography on
Swallow would be a novel in itself. His life has been a constant, eclectic
contact with so many of the creatives of this world, including backing poet
Robert Creeley, with whom he has collaborated.
Currently Steve leads a
group in support of his latest release, "Always Pack Your Uniform on Top"
recorded live at Ronnie Scott's in London, containing Chris Potter (tenor sax
of Steely Dan fame), Mick Goodrick (ECM guitar icon), Adam Nussbaum (Mike
Brecker and John Scofield groups) and Barry Reis on
trumpet.
JazzReview.com: Steve, thanks for taking the time to
chat with us. To start tell us how is it different for you being a bassist who
leads the group as opposed to supporting others?
Steve Swallow:
Playing bass in my own band feels the same to me as playing in any other
band. Bass is bass. What's different about playing in my band, and what makes
it especially exciting for me, is that I'm hearing excellent players develop
music I've written.
JazzReview.com: Who were your original
influences?
Steve Swallow: Percy Heath, Paul Chambers, Wilbur
Ware, Doug Watkins.
JazzReview.com: What effect did Jaco have
on you...what was your experience with him and his music?
Steve
Swallow: I first met Jaco at Berklee College in Boston, in 1975, where I
was teaching. Pat Metheny, with whom I was playing in Gary Burton's band, had
told me about him. Jaco, who was in Boston visiting Pat, knocked on my office
door and blew through the room with great intensity, surprising the hell out of
the student I was teaching. We talked for about fifteen minutes; I liked him
immediately.
We met only occasionally over the ensuing years, but I
was always moved by his eagerness to connect with me. Once, when I was playing
with Paul Bley and John Scofield in a small Greenwich Village club, he gave me
his famous, battle-scarred fretless. I left it proudly on display on the
bandstand for a few nights, until he returned to collect it.
I'd say
that Jaco's influence on my playing wasn't considerable. By the time I'd heard
him at any length I think I'd sorted out most of the basic elements of my
playing on my own, with the help of the mentors listed above and others too
numerous to mention. But I was especially drawn to Weather Report when Jaco was
in the band, and much admired the way he served that music. He was a wonderful
player, and an excellent writer as well.
JazzReview.com: You've
mentioned that the Beatles were a big influence for you and I know they were
for Pat and Burton. How has that manifested in your work and do you find that
influence prevalent in most of those you perform with.
Steve
Swallow: As for the Beatles: I was very taken by them during their brief
career. I was impressed most by the quality of their songwriting, and by George
Martin's production. But their importance to me faded fairly quickly after they
broke up, as my interests shifted. I think in the end I was much more
decisively influenced by some of their influences, most particularly Motown.
I think this is also true of many of the people I've worked with. The
Beatles seem to me to be very much of their time (although I realize they do
enjoy a remarkable enduring popularity). But I, and most of my friends with
whom I've discussed this, associate them strongly with the sixties, and with
the intense societal changes of that time.
JazzReview.com:
"Falling grace" is such a great tune and was even played by Bill Evans. Was
it actually your first tune?
Steve Swallow: Falling Grace was
my second tune. The first was called Eiderdown. I wrote Falling Grace on George
Russell's piano. My wife of the time and I had sublet George's apartment on
Bank Street in New York City. I've wondered if Falling Grace was in fact
intended for George; maybe I just had the good fortune to be at his piano when
it emerged.
JazzReview.com: What was Evan's influence on you?
Steve Swallow: Bill Evans
taught me a great deal. Falling Grace was in fact written for him, but I never
found the nerve to give the piece to him. Eddie Gomez actually brought it to
his attention, and I was completely surprised one day to find it recorded by
Bill. He played it beautifully. Bill's lessons ranged from very nuts-and-bolts
information about harmony and phrasing to more abstract concepts such as
intensity of focus. His entire demeanor was a positive example for me. He
actually recorded several of my songs, none of which I had given to him; he
just found them somehow. Finally, I called Helen Keane, got Bill's mailing
address, photocopied several of my pieces, put them in an envelope, addressed
the envelope. I then learned of Bill's death.
JazzReview.com:
That's amazing; timing's everything. Lyle mentioned he's a fan of yours.
Can you tell me about your disc "Home" that he's on? How did that come about?
Steve Swallow: I began writing Home during a time I was
experiencing great difficulty composing. It occurred to me that Robert
Creeley's poems, which I greatly admired, might push me into action. And in
fact they did. A while after I began working with this material I moved with my
family to Bolinas, California, and to my complete surprise found that Creeley
lived there. He was very supportive of this project, and happy with the
results. We have maintained a relationship to this day; we've done occasional
concerts together in the last few years.
The players on Home were
simply my closest musical associates at that time, with the exception of Lyle
Mays, whom I had just met, but whose work with Pat had greatly impressed me.
The album was made very quickly, as were all ECM albums, and I think Lyle,
whose parts were largely improvisatory, did an amazing job. Sheila Jordan and I
had rehearsed together for months, but everybody else recorded the music with
minimal rehearsal. I think this approach worked to the music's advantage.
JazzReview.com: Can you talk a bit about the new disc, "Always
Pack Your Uniform on Top" w/ Goodrick and Nussbaum? How did you arrive at the
title?
Steve Swallow: Freddie Greene, the best rhythm guitarist
ever and one of the all-time greatest road rats, is said to have responded to a
request for advice from an aspiring musician, "Always pack your uniform on
top." That's the kind of guy he was, very direct and to-the-point. That phrase
conjures for me the texture of life on the road, which was something I hoped to
convey by recording live at Ronnie Scott's club. A great many of my favorite
jazz recordings were made live. The technology necessary to do this has evolved
swiftly, and it is now fairly convenient and economical to bring the equipment
to the musicians, instead of the other way around.
Always Pack is my
third, and final, recording written for the classic trumpet-tenor quintet. When
I was discovering jazz in the 1950s Blue Note and Prestige were releasing
endless albums in this format, and I bought as many of them as I could. The
sound of this ensemble still evokes those years for me.
JazzReview.com: How important and difficult is composing to you?
Steve Swallow: Composing is as important to me as playing. My
feeling is that playing and composing support and nourish each other. I'd be a
lesser player if I didn't write, and a lesser writer if I didn't play.
Composing is tremendously difficult and painful for me, and I often go to great
lengths to avoid it. In fact, that's what I'm doing at this very moment.
JazzReview.com: How do you go about composing?
Steve Swallow: I go about composing like a factory worker. I punch in. I
believe it's written somewhere "Steve Swallow has to sit uneasily at the piano
for ten hours before receiving his next idea," so I sit there as patiently as
possible. Eventually, an idea always comes, and then the rest is science.
JazzReview.com: Do you write with Carla?
Steve
Swallow: Carla and I never write together. Every morning, if we're at home,
we head off in different directions with our coffee, each to his or her piano.
We confer, but never collaborate.
JazzReview.com: You're given
acknowledgement in Gil Goldstein's great book, the "Jazz Composer's Companion".
How did you add to the book?
Steve Swallow: I visited Gil
Goldstein in his uptown Manhattan apartment often while he was writing "The
Jazz Composer's Companion," and offered my comments on what he was doing.
Mostly I encouraged him to get on with it, and to get it published.
JazzReview.com: You also mention that you have an affinity for certain
poets and in Robert Creeley's words...make the connection between the ear,
syllable and 'the breath to the line' and 'form as an extension of content'.
Its interesting that you mention that Creeley's work has suggested line and
structure.
Steve Swallow: I think Robert Creeley has been as
important an influence on my work as any musician. Before I found my vocation
as a musician I intended to be a poet, and he was the poet I most admired. I
was not at all surprised to find that he has a deep affinity with jazz. I love
playing behind him when he reads; it's like playing with a great horn player. I
may be stretching a bit, but I feel placed as strongly in the line of Olsen,
Williams and Creeley as I do in the line of Monk and Miles.
JazzReview.com: Can you comment on your early and continuing work
Scofield ('Rough House' and 'Bar Talk' to 'I Can See your House From Here' etc)
Steve Swallow: John Scofield and I found an immediate comfort
in each other's playing. We first played together in Boston in 1975, and have
kept a strong relationship since. We tour together at least once a year, lately
with Bill Stewart. We are a lot alike. We walk a bit like each other, talk in a
similar way, etc. Playing together is like falling off a log.
JazzReview.com: What about working with Pat ('I Can See Your House...'
sessions etc)?
Steve Swallow: I think Pat and I also play
together very easily. His way with a line makes immediate sense to me, and for
this reason I'm usually able to play well in step with him.
JazzReview.com: Can you illuminate the process of producing others, like
Scofield, etc? What are you doing/adding that you wouldnt be if you were
playing bass alone and is it more or less comfortable/stressful than just
playing?
Steve Swallow: Producing is a great deal more
stressful than playing for me, and for this reason I've been doing less of it
lately. But it's a service I like to perform. I certainly see producing as a
service to the artist who's asked for help. What the producer does is entirely
a response to what the artist needs. It can be very gratifying work. The trick
is to do as little as possible, only what the artist can't or won't do for
himself.
JazzReview.com: Are there any plans for you and Sco or
Pat to do any more recording or touring?
Steve Swallow: There
are no immediate plans for Pat, Sco and I to work together again, but I'd jump
right on it if the occasion arose. I loved the touring and recording we did.
JazzReview.com: What's your current road and studio
setups...amps, basses, f/x, strings?
Steve Swallow: Road setup:
Harvey Citron 5-string, hollow-body, 36" scale bass, with an EMG piezo pickup
and La Bella medium-light roundwound strings, played through a 1970s Walter
Woods amp into whatever speaker cabinet is provided.
Studio setup:
Same bass into a Glockenklang preamp, a DBX 160 compressor, a Studio
Technologies stereoizer and finally two channels of old Neve mic preamps,
direct to tape.
JazzReview.com: Are you playing any upright?
Steve Swallow: I gave up playing upright in 1970. Occasionally,
when I run into a great bass backstage at a festival I'll play a few notes on
the low E string, just to feel the instrument vibrate against my belly.
JazzReview.com: As far as teaching goes...do you and if so,
what's your philosophy and emphasis?
Steve Swallow: I don't
teach. I overtaught during two years at Berklee in the mid-70s, and resolved
then not to do it again.
JazzReview.com: How would you describe
your philosophy of music, composition and life as a musician?
Steve
Swallow: I'm an animist.
JazzReview.com: Do you have any
particular spiritual orientation...do you tend to meditate or do any kind of
preparation for performing, writing, touring?
Steve Swallow: I
don't meditate before I play or compose, but I see playing and composing as
meditative acts.
JazzReview.com: What are your upcoming
projects?
Steve Swallow: I'm writing music now for a tour in
the fall of next year with a trio composed of myself, Chris Potter and Adam
Nussbaum. Whew!
JazzReview.com: Thank you, Steve.
Photo by: © Jos Knaepen
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