- Yesterday was Grammy day, and after much bureaucratic shuffling, the attendees were Adam, Kaveh, Angela, and Shane. It was a full day commitment involving suits and parking passes and stashed-away granola bars. The event bore some resemblance to other large conventions (although it is decidedly better-dressed than the National Baseball Card Convention). One thing going for me is that I love convention centers. I found one large area that was totally empty and had weird 80’s graphics on the carpeting and that made me very happy.
- But more along the lines of things that other human beings would find interesting, there were definitely lots of celebrities there, both in the Uninteresting Super Famous Person category as well as the Interesting Moderately Famous Person category. Highlights for me celebrity-wise were brief moments I shared with Queen Latifah (waiting in line eating pretzels together), George Clinton (I helped him deflect an overzealous fan), and sitting behind Neil Young.
- The telecast itself was, as you know if you saw even a brief moment, a spectacle on a grand scale. The general storyline seemed to be Sexy Chick Battle in which Lady Gaga played the annoying artsy girl that one roots against, Taylor Swift played the sweet naive country girl that one roots for, and Beyonce keeps it from seeming too white. My favorite thing was seeing Stephen Colbert in person, and P!nk becoming a human Spr!nkler was pretty cool.
- More interesting was the pre-telecast in which more, uh, well-rounded music people were featured. There’s a whole range of hard-working musicians who are working in fields visible or obscure that are there to receive accolades from their colleagues and that is nice to see. Chick Corea wore a really weird shirt.
- In total, although from my personal perspective the usual caveats apply about awards shows and other overly tangible signs of success in the arts, it was a real honor to be included in such a thing, and really nice to get an approving nod from the nominating and voting committees. The band works very hard and I am really happy to see the other guys have a reason to celebrate. It’s also been nice to hear that fans and friends have felt inspired that our quite personal and entirely uncompromising music would be honored by such a mainstream organization. It reinforces my long-held belief that the strongest statement is the most strongly believed statement, and that little good is done in the arts by trying to appeal to others, even toward that very goal.
WE_BLOG
The News From Grammytown
NYC and SIM
- First off, I am having trouble figuring out how to make paragraphs in this blog editor. So, this post will be a list of BULLET POINTS, but is intended to be paragraphs and should be read as such. Sorry for this. OK Here we Go!
- Thanks to everyone who made this a great trip for us: Ralph, Jake, Clark, Tiffany and all the SIM students, James and Adam at Search and Restore, Tony Falco at the Falcon Arts Center, Jon, Jeff and Shanta at Joe’s Pub, Jonathan, Harish and Alan for housing.
- It was a rewarding trip not least because we were able to see a lot of great music on some nights off and after our gigs. There is so much great stuff happening in New York right now (as always). Ben Monder is sounding better than ever with his new trio (Ben Street and Alan Ferber). Jim Black and Alasnoaxis had a fantastic CD release show at the Bowery Poetry Club. Nate sounded great playing with Nir Felder at Fatcat where I played some sweaty ping-pong and chatted with fellow Banff faculty Matt Penman.
- There is a lot of talk these days about a downswing in festival sponsorship, some venues closing, transformation of the record industry, etc. etc. Yet I am still convinced that the “jazz scene” (I put it in quotes to convey its very ambiguous bounds) is overflowing with talented musicians making compelling music, and that there are places for this music to be performed and appreciated. Sure, not every city has a perfect venue, and it’s difficult to make a lot of money performing creative instrumental music, but I think that looking back on this period it will be clear that it was a rich and vibrant time for the music despite some of these difficulties.
- Playing in New York, still the epicenter of the jazz scene after 70 years, is a special pleasure for us. All of our music is imbued with new layers of meaning when it occurs within a community and an artistic context, and we are honored to participate in the rich and varied world that is the “jazz scene” in New York today. So again, thanks to everyone that helped this week happen, and we’ll see you all again soon.
- –adam
In New York this week….
Exciting day. Adam and Kaveh arrived in New York late last night. Met Shane at the show today in Williamsburg, waited for Nate and Ben to make it into town from Germany! We had a great show at Public Assembly today… Thanks to James and Adam from Search and Restore for having us there. Also thanks to Steve Coleman and Andrew D’Angelo for playing such great music today. Now: June 21st @ Joe’s Pub!!!!
New Project: Kneebody Charts!
Hi readers, Adam here again. In response to a veritable Flood of popular demand, we are going to be creating charts for a lot of Kneebody songs in the upcoming months. As you may know, one of the defining aspects of our band is that we learn everything by ear, so none of our songs have charts yet (although most have some composer’s scribbles somewhere). I will be creating PDF charts of many of the songs on our upcoming album, to be released when the album comes out. I also plan on doing a handful of older songs, so now is the time to put in requests if there are any Kneebody songs you want to see charts to! Just leave comments after this post, and if there is sufficient interest in a song, I’ll create a chart for it. Tell your friends, be the first on the block to collect the entire set.
Adam’s Weekend In Minneapolis
Hi folks, Adam here. After Kneebody played in Minneapolis on Friday, I stayed a few extra days to check out the town. The following is a short travel essay on my experiences, cross-posted from adambenjamin.net. Thanks for reading!
A peculiar combination of factors led to my spending the last four days in Minneapolis and environs. Said factors included: personal work-scheduling oddities, the opportunity for discount travel, some stubborn sense from my youth that time spent traveling alone is somehow necessary for personal growth (even when I don’t particularly want to be away from my wonderful wife), a fascination with the American Midwest and the baseball-card-collecting subculture thereof, and the touring schedules of Kneebody, Brad Mehldau and the Kansas City Royals. The result was exquisite, a long weekend in Minnesota that was both busy and quiet.
The foundation of the trip was a short trip with Kneebody, including two clinics, a concert at Dazzle and a KUVO radio spot in Denver, followed by a concert at Dakota Jazz Club in Minneapolis. Playing and teaching in Denver was a treat as always. (Thanks to Tyler, Donald, Gerry, Pam, Karen, Bob.) Playing in Minneapolis for the first time was great, as we have been meaning to infiltrate the Twin Cities for quite some time. (Thanks to Dan, Lowell, Wesley, Carl Pohlad.)
The rest of my long weekend included visits to two iconic sites of the Super Giant Stuff school of American architecture: the Metrodome and the Mall of America. Bloomington’s Mall of America is famously the largest mall in the USA, and boasts that it attracts more visitors than Disney World, Graceland and the Grand Canyon combined, but as the most extreme example of the mall phenomenon it serves well to demonstrate its limits. A combination of all possible franchises is not novel in itself, although it is theoretically convenient. It is still quite a neutral space and the generic nature of the franchises subdues the mall’s more unique elements (water park, aquarium, amusement park). It is segmented into “neighborhoods” that attempt to group stores appropriately and this results in some interesting visual spaces (notably the pink neon and shiny silver plastic “technology neighborhood” on the third floor) and some memorable nomenclature (the Macy’s end of the second story is the “Upper West Side”, the 14-screen theater and food court on the fourth floor is the “Theater District”). Still, the best things about malls to my mind – eerie acoustics, awkward fountains, and the sad areas surrounding shuttered franchises – are not as impressive here than at your local Westfield Shoppingtown.
Cheesy cacophony at the Mall of America.
Where the Mall fails, the Metrodome succeeds: its decaying concrete and plastics surround a vast empty space that give voice to their message of Midwestern humility and utilitarianism, the garish May sunlight turned appropriately grim by the semi-translucent dome. The almost claustrophobic walkways emphasize the vastness of the playing field, on which unfolds a slow game comprised mostly of stillness, performed at the highest level by a workaday Twins squad that still somehow embodies these Midwestern values. I was happy to see DH Jason Kubel, son of my former piano tuner in Los Angeles, excelling for the Twins, but the real standout was Royals closer Joakim Soria. Watching him warm and throw the ninth was similar to seeing Mehldau the next night – all the elements align to allow a normal person to function on a level beyond their colleagues, everyone quietly acknowledging the rarity of such ability.
A dated style is endearing in the Metrodome’s last season hosting the Twins.
Turning to Mehldau’s trio, it was especially instructive to see him perform on the Dakota’s Yamaha piano, as I often wonder how much of his unique tone is attributable to his choice in piano (perhaps just as worthy an artistic element as touch anyhow). This piano was certainly bright, and brightened further by the PA, but Mehldau is so gentle with the bottom of the keybed, and has such precision even at the quietest dynamics, that it still had the warm concert hall resonance of his more recognizable Steinway tone. Although it wasn’t the most inspired set I’ve seen them play, Larry Grenadier was a standout, playing clearly conceived ideas with intonation as excellent and as personal as Charlie Haden’s. I met plenty of Minneapolis jazz musicians at this show and they were universally warm and positive about their local scene, which was refreshing. When we were chatting with the band and management afterwards, I thought about how Mehldau is one of the only young jazz musicians that I still see as a legend more than a colleague, and that felt so thoroughly healthy that, although I felt silly for it, I sipped my beer and chatted with the other guys rather than introduce myself to him. Though many people I work with or know are heroes of mine, it’s still nice to have a still have a hero in the way I did before I was a working musician too.
Stillwater, Minnesota is an “International Book Town”, in fact the first North American town to be so named, following the original Book Town, Hay-On-Wye in Scotland (insert sandwich joke here). I took a day trip along the St. Croix River to visit Stillwater and some local parks and towns, reveling in the familiar late-spring humidity and friendly woodsiness of the area and its similarity to my childhood home in central New York. Getting out into small-town America in a rental car, listening to Gillian Welch’s Soul Journey, my mind was quiet and turned to family, recalling the innumerable similar weekend trips I took with my family growing up in the Northeast. I can’t codify the particular lessons I learn from my solo travels the way I did when I was younger, but the lessons are still valuable. Being alone with myself with all the daily trappings of my adult life cast aside feels grounding. And if there’s one thing in life I’ve always known I wanted to do, it’s to travel America. What better time than now?
Stillwater, MN and sunset at MSP International Airport. I love my country.
Kneebody/Busdriver video!
These clips have just been uploaded on youtube of the last Kneebody/Busdriver show at the Little Temple in Silverlake in the Winter of 2008. The video is taken from a computer sitting next to the sound booth. Not the best picture but I’m so psyched about how this music sounds. Bus is one of our favorite collaborations ever. I can’t wait to work on an album with him. Rad rad rad.
“Gun Control”
“Imaginary Places”
Our Recent trip in Chronological order. (My knee hurts still…)
Just got back from our trip to Denver and Minneapolis. It was all so great to get together with everyone and play and also see Denver and a new city where we’ve never played before. When we arrived in Denver, I went for an ambitious jog through my mom’s neighborhood. I came back exhilarated that I weathered the high altitude but later was disappointed that my left knee started to ache considerably. We had dinner at my mom’s house, watched a little bit of the Nuggets/Hornets game and later headed to the radio station KUVO with my friend Matt Seres to do an interview for our show at Dazzle. It’s always great to get to drive through Denver, retracing the route to KUVO that I used to take back when I was seventeen to DJ there overnight on fridays. We got there and had an interview with DJ Joshua Trinidad, a great person and musician. He’s been hosting a show there for the past few years and has always been so welcoming to us, playing our music and promoting our shows. We followed that with a killer chocolate shake at the Denver Diner on Speer and Colfax. Sitting there, we got to see Nuggets fans speeding down the street celebrating the team’s victory. The next morning, we were up early at six thirty to make it across town to teach a couple hours at Legacy High school. We worked with some great young musicians teaching them Shane’s song “The Slip” and playing improvisation games. We then headed south to another high school, Highland Ranch High School and played for students there. They had a concert that night and played some of the music they were rehearsing for us. I got together for a lesson with a young bass player, Sam Zarrin who’s father Ali is close friends with my father. Sam sounds great. Our sets at Dazzle that night were great. Now they have a full back line, drums, rhodes and bass amp are there already so we didn’t need to do the usual driving around to borrow friends’ equipment (thanks Daren and Derek, Mark and others for so many years of help in that department). The next morning, we flew to Minnesota. Minneapolis was amazing. This is the town where I bought my P bass five or six years ago. We’ve all been excited to play here. Our friends in the band Happy Apple are from here and they told us about the Dakota. Our visit was short but was great. We played at the Dakota Jazz club (www.dakotacooks.com). This is a true great modern jazz club. These people are all so dedicated and great there. When we arrived, a combo was playing. It was a sax player, bassist and pianist. They were celebrating the saxophonist’s 90th birthday. That’s right, the man was turning 90 and he sounded wonderful. They all sounded so good. They played “What’s New” and it was killing… We played to a really great crowd there. Two sets. Thank you to our friends who made it and brought their friends, Shari Mohabir, Ali Franzen, and Jared Hankins. We appreciate it so much. After we played, saxophonist Brandon Wozniak (http://www.myspace.com/brandonwozniak) played with a trio (guitar and drums). They sounded fantastic. Again reminding me that the best music is everywhere. Late after the gig, Shane and I took a cab around the corner to see my friends Colin Hay (www.colinhay.com) and Ace Baker who were in Minneapolis for a solo concert Colin was performing. We had a nightcap there and made it back to the hotel, slept a few hours and woke and headed to the airport for home. Now, we’re recharging and will be back in New York next month for our workshop at SIM (www.SchoolForImprov.org).
Kneebody June Intensive Workshop In Brooklyn. Join Us!!
Hi Everyone,
For those of you who play music and want to participate in a one week workshop lead by Kneebody, we will be doing a residency at SIM (The School for Improvisation Music) in June. The program will be open to all instruments and all skill levels - preformed groups are welcome. In past residencies, the school has seen everything from highschool and college players up to adult hobbyists and retired pros. Here is all the info - deadline for applying is May 1st!
DATE/TIME:
June 15th to the 19th, 2009 11am to 5pm each day
TUITION:
$550 for the week (includes two lessons with any member during week)
LOCATION:
Brooklyn, NY
WEBSITES:
www.SchoolForImprov.org
(Click on ‘SIM Workshops’, then ‘Kneebody Intensive Faculty and Schedule’)
www.Kneebody.com
www.myspace.com/Kneebody
REGISTRATION/QUESTIONS:
Contact Ralph or Areni at: info@schoolforimprov.org
DEADLINE: May 1st, 2009
ABOUT SIM:
Founded by Trumpeter Ralph Alessi, the School for Improvisational Music (SIM) is the instructional facet of CIM for aspiring students of creative music. SIM has held 12 intensive workshops since 2001, attended by 500 students from over 10 countries. The SIM faculty consists of a cross-section of the most creative improvisers from the jazz and contemporary music fields.







