I was invited to a masterclass
recently at USC featuring guitarist Robben Ford.
I was particularly keen to go as Robben was quite
an influence on me as a growing musician back in
the early 80s. Besides that, it is always nice to
hang out with the USC professors, they are all great
players in their own right, and always fun to hang
out with.
I was expecting to see Robben
play more and talk about his approach to playing
but there was very little. Mostly he answered questions,
and there were plenty of those. He began with quite
a disclaimer in that he didn't have any formal training,
was completely self taught and improved slowly by
beating the s**t out of the guitar! Something I
think we all relate to.
He talked about his time with
Miles Davis and his start with the Yellowjackets
and how he got his first record deal, but then he
mentioned something that struck a chord with me
(if you pardon the pun!). He talked about the time
when it was important to show everyone what he could
do on the guitar and the need to get that out of
his system. Then, when he was with Miles Davis,
it was at a time when he was negotiating his first
record deal with Warner Brothers and an opportunity
to really start his solo career, something that
became a factor in his leaving Miles' band.
Robben then went on to say that
that first record with Warners ("Talk To Your
Daughter") was a landmark record for him as
it took him to a different level as an artist. No
longer was it important for him to prove his abilities,
but it became important to step up to the next level
as a complete artist and find out who he really
was.
He then went on to say that what
really 'gets him off' was working on his own music,
and making it feel good and groove and swing hard.
His focus is always on the song itself, what it
needs and how to go about serving it.
Then he went on to say that musicians
for the most part aren't interested in the notes
another musician is playing, but how those notes
are being played. Musicians want to hear other players
feel the phrase and make it groove hard. That is
what the interaction thing is all about.
I should just clarify that I think
what Robben is implying here is that musicians should
already have a good vocabulary before they take
this on board. I'm sure he wouldn't advocate playing
all wrong notes. There is certainly a lot of truth
in what he says though.
I'm always interested in how an
artist arrives at being a truly great artist. Clearly
talent is usually there from the beginning but there
is always a point where an artist truly becomes
great and I think it is around the time that that
artist decides it is time to be completely himself
or herself. The days of needing to impress others
has to go away, the time spent on copying other
players' licks and lines needs to be put in perspective.
In essence, and this is only my
opinion, an artist becomes a truly great artist
when he or she is thinking about their own music
and how to make it unique. The struggle for an identifiable
and distinctive voice becomes the number one goal.
John Scofield once said "We are all limited
by our own vocabulary, it's what we do with that
limited vocabulary that matters". Wise words
indeed. And no one plays with a more unique approach
than Scofield. He has clearly taken an approach,
honed it and made it truly his.
Great artistry is all well and
good but of course we all need to walk before we
can run. All those years of practice, learning vocabulary,
learning how to swing, learning how to accompany,
to read, must not go ignored. But there is something
that happens when you decide to be a leader of a
group and make the decision to be the 'voice' within
that group. It usually opens up a new musical outlook.
Finally, and something Robben
reiterated again and again throughout his seminar,
was the need to 'jump in at the deep end'. He said,
"no matter how much preparation one does, nothing
can beat the experience of live playing. It's sink
or swim", as he recalled his first two nerve-shattering
nights with Miles Davis. "You just have to
do it!" he says. "Jump off the deep end
once in a while".