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Barry Cleveland

Barry Cleveland Interview

May 10, 2010
Barry Cleveland, News
Barry Cleveland

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For more than 20 years Barry Cleveland has been scouring the sonic terrain of electric guitar. With a mix of progressive and psychedelic rock, ambient, experimental, funk, and various other influences combined with unorthodox playing techniques and an affinity for texturing, Cleveland’s releases have rarely invited pigeonholing. When he isn’t spending time as a key contributor to Guitar Player magazine, he squeezes in time for his own work which has been described as, “all about sound…[with] deeply layered, highly nuanced, cutting-edge sonics that unify his wildly diverse material].” With “Hologramatron”, his fifth album and follow up to 2004’s world fusion venture “Volcano”, Cleveland reinvents the protest album. As a response to 21st century realities, along with the help of acoustic and electric 6- and 12-string guitars and the revolutionary Moog Guitar, Cleveland has synthesized angst and frustration into a sonic concoction that (like past records) defies easy categorization.

Abstract Logix: There is definitely a hint of some anger or at least frustration on the new one. Was this something that you wanted to do for a long time or a reaction to the last eight or so years of the political shift in the US?

Barry Cleveland: “Hologramatron” took several years to complete, and the first three songs that I wrote—“Lake of Fire,” “Money Speaks,” and “Suicide Train”—were initially sparked by the political and social deterioration that had gained momentum during the Bush presidency. Most of the topics dealt with in those songs aren’t limited to specific times and places, however, and a lot of the imagery just bubbled up from my unconscious. Religious hypocrisy, ecological degradation, fascism, the corrupting influence of money, overpopulation, war profiteering, social conditioning, economic inequality, personal isolation, and consumerism are rooted in larger realities that go to the core of human nature. I felt that a lot of people were angry and upset about these things, but that few musicians were choosing to deal with them, and you know what they say about nature abhorring a vacuum. Of course, not all of the songs on “Hologramatron” are political.

AL: The album is kind of varied and reminds a little bit of some of Roger Waters’ stuff from the 80s and 90s? What kind of stuff has influenced you in the past in this vein?

BC: If by “this vein” you mean politically oriented music there are obviously lots of precedents, from Joe Hill and Phil Ochs to Bob Dylan and John Lennon to the Clash and Bob Marley to Rage Against the Machine and Public Enemy. And that’s not to mention all of the international artists. But a strong personal reference for me was the Art Bears’ The World as It is Today, which dealt with a lot of the same themes. Peter Hammill is another artist who has intelligently taken on political and existential topics throughout his career. As far as the album being “kind of varied,” that’s definitely an understatement—the songs on the album are wildly varied. I know that you didn’t mean that as a criticism, but it is funny how these days having different styles of music on an album can be viewed as a lack of consistency, though I suspect record company A&R and marketing types have contributed to that perception, as they prefer brands that stay on message. Would “Sgt. Pepper” have been a better album if all of the songs had sounded more alike?

AL: What is the meaning of the album title?

BC: The title popped into my head one afternoon while I was walking in the woods. I had been thinking about holograms, and in particular various holographic theories of consciousness and the universe, and those thoughts were no doubt the catalyst. My imagination added the suffix “-tron,” which makes any word sound cooler, and –tron is derived from “electron,” which has a particular connection to tubes and a general connection to experimental apparatuses—both of which relate to the project literally and metaphorically. The title may also “mean” something specifically, but if so I have no idea what that is, and even if I did I wouldn’t say, as that would take all the fun out of it. The short answer is that it means whatever you need it to mean.

AL: Who / what are your influences in writing lyrics? How do they accompany the song? Lyrics first or music first?

BC: The lyrics to “Lake of Fire” were sparked by a documentary in which rightwing politicians, televangelists, and media pundits testified to their personal relationships with Jesus. I wondered just exactly who this “Jesus” was that advised them and presumably shared their views, and what it would be like if he actually showed up. The evil Jesus character was also partially inspired by the depraved mechanical counterfeit of the saintly “Maria” in Fritz Lang’s Metropolis. Of course, the song is about hypocrisy, and really has nothing to do with Jesus. The music had already been composed and I fit the words to it. “Stars of Sayulita” also began with the music. The simple two-chord motif in 13/8 came to me while I was leaning against a rock by the ocean in Sayulita, Mexico, playing guitar and gazing at the Milky Way. I played a rough and mostly improvised version of the song a few days later at the International Live Looping Festival in Santa Cruz, and it quickly developed from there. The melody just appeared out of nowhere one evening, and the words followed shortly thereafter. They were inspired by a paradoxical sense of impermanence and timelessness that I experienced that night in Sayulita, and carved figurines of spirits dancing on old tombstones in a nearby jungle graveyard, among other things. It’s a cliché, but the song wrote itself. Although I didn’t write the lyrics to “Warning,” the genesis of the song is interesting. I had recorded a sort of heavy metal guitar loop, and after altering his consciousness in various ways, I asked Michael Masley (a.k.a. the Artist General) to rap along with it. He performed a 20-minute impromptu rant that was later diced, spliced, processed, and layered into a quasi-linear narrative. We essentially opened a door to his unconscious and that’s what popped out.

AL: Robert Powell’s addition brings to mind some of David Gilmour’s work with Floyd on “Breathe” among other tracks. Were you going for / thinking of that at all?

BC: Robert and I have worked together for many years, and although I do sometimes make general suggestions as to what sorts of parts I’m hearing for a particular song, I’ve found that it is usually best to just give him complete freedom and see what he comes up with. On “Hologramatron” I did do a lot of editing and processing of his parts, not all of which he approved of, at least initially—but I didn’t ask him to sound like anyone in particular. And while we are both big Gilmour fans, we didn’t attempt to cop his sound either compositionally or performance-wise. Robert does things on the pedal-steel guitar that as far as I know are unprecedented.

AL: Is the pacing of the album intentional? That is to say would you define it as a “concept album”?

BC: Sequencing songs on an album is a little like aligning tumblers while cracking a safe—you listen carefully and keep turning the dial until they fall into place. In this case it happened towards the very end, just before mastering. I moved one song from the second slot to the eighth, added a song to the end, and viola! A lot of factors have to be considered while sequencing songs, and pacing is obviously a huge one—the way one song flows into the other and that one flows into the following song. And sometimes it can be counterintuitive. For example, I would never have thought to put “What Have They Done to the Rain” after “Warning”—especially with just one second of space between them—but at some point in the recording process we just happened to hear them back to back and thought, “Yeah!” I didn’t necessarily set out to make a concept album, but once the songs were all completed and strung together it was apparent that certain themes tended to recur throughout, so perhaps that’s what the muse intended from the beginning.

AL: How did Manring work with this album as opposed to the past (“Volcano”) where you just gave him the small parts?

BC: For the most part it was the same. I worked up demos of the tunes with simple bass lines and Michael either transformed them into more sophisticated lines or composed entirely new parts that I could never have conceived of. He doesn’t mess around. He shows up at sessions with several complete ideas for each song and records them in one or at most two takes. After that, I typically ask him to go nuts and improvise an additional track or two just to see what he comes up with. Most of the songs on “Hologramatron” include multiple bass tracks, some of which are mixed up front and others farther back, occasionally to the point of being nearly subliminal. I also processed a lot of his parts pretty heavily. For example, I used a Moogerfooger FreqBox to add a fat and nasty snarl to his fretless lines on “You’ll Just Have to See It to Believe” and a Minimoog-like funkiness to some of his parts on “Money Speaks.” Michael is one of the most creative and innovative bassists on the planet, and working with him is always a humbling experience.

AL: Was there any particular reason to switch vocalists on the album as opposed to just sticking with Neuburg? What was your thinking there?

BC: I began writing the songs before I had met Amy. I imagined them being sung by some of my favorite vocalists as I was working on them—and I actually pitched “Lake of Fire” and “Suicide Train” to Peter Hammill and “What Have They Done to the Rain” to Richie Havens. Hammill was gracious enough to listen, and though he obviously passed, he suggested that I just go with my demo vocal on “Suicide Train,” which I would never have considered doing otherwise. I also met with Havens, but he wasn’t able to do it for various reasons. I found out about Amy X Neuburg while researching an article on looping, and I was blown away when I saw her solo live-looping set, so I asked her if she’d like to sing some songs. She was the perfect vocalist for “Lake of Fire” and “Money Speaks,” because the words are more like spoken rants than lyrics, and she has impeccable diction in addition to being a classically trained vocalist. She also brought lots of personality, humor, and irony to the songs, which made an immense difference. Her little tongue-in-cheek tag at the end of “Lake,” for example, put a completely different twist on the song. At first she wasn’t wild about singing “What Have They Done to the Rain,” because it wasn’t at all her style. But she gave it a try and wound up doing a fantastic job that we were both quite pleased with. As we were wrapping that session I asked her if she’d like to sing the final verse of “Telstar,” and she stepped back up to the mic and knocked it out in one take. I met Harry Manx at the Montreal Jazz Festival a couple of years ago and we became friends, so I asked him to sing “Stars of Sayulita.” I really love Harry’s voice, and was honored and delighted when he agreed. Deborah Holland heard early versions of a few tracks and offered to sing on the record, but we couldn’t find a song that matched her range, so she suggested doing the harmony vocals and vocal arrangement on “Stars.” She’s a great vocalist and her voice blended beautifully with Harry’s. She also told me she liked my demo vocals on “Suicide Train,” so after hearing that from both her and Peter Hammill, I wound up keeping them.

AL: With “Volcano” you had a novel rhythmic approach with the world rhythms. This album is more textural and aside from “Stars of Sayulita” it’s all pretty much in common time. Can you talk about how you that kind of sound came about for this album?

BC: Actually, the African and Afro-Haitian rhythms on Volcano are all in 4/4, 3/4 or 6/8 as I recall. On the new album “Stars of Sayulita” and “Suicide Train” are both in 13/8 and “Warning” is in 11/8, so there are more odd time signatures on this one than the last. Celso Alberti did an extraordinary job of playing the 13/8 parts, somehow managing to make them groove and even swing in spots—so much so that you didn’t even notice that “Suicide Train” was in an odd time signature. He is an amazing drummer who has played with Airto Moreira and Steve Winwood’s touring band, and a lot of what you are hearing on the CD are first and second takes, even on the really challenging stuff. Celso originally objected to my “Be My Baby” rhythmic concept for “What Have They Done to the Rain,” but after experimenting with more sophisticated grooves and feels he finally agreed that the song was indeed calling for it. Rick Walker played the drums on “Warning,” and we got what we needed in two takes despite the very tricky 11/8 phrasing. He assembled a bizarre homemade kit that included a huge rubber “bass drum,” and sheet aluminum “cymbals,” with giant chains spread on top of everything for a genuinely metal sound. On the choruses he played a teakettle with his fingers, which I later ran through a ring modulator.

AL: This album seems relatively composed compared to some of the more improvised sounds on your previous releases. Is that accurate and how did that fit into the composition / project?

BC: The balance of composition to improvisation is actually about the same as on “Volcano”, and the compositional process wasn’t radically different—though on “Volcano” all of the rhythm tracks were already recorded before I began, whereas on “Hologramatron” the actual drums were mostly added towards the end. Of course, these days the line between composition and improvisation can be a little hazy, as what begins as a composed structure may in some cases get changed in response to improvised overdubs, and bits of improvisation can be edited and arranged into compositions. An example of the former is the melodic theme toward the end of “Stars of Sayulita,” which began with one of Michael Manring’s bass parts. He improvised a line, harmonized it on the spot, and then I layered in guitar parts to construct a theme. “Dateless Oblivion & Divine Repose” is entirely improvised, “You’ll Just Have to See It to Believe” and “Warning” were almost entirely improvised, and “Abandoned Mines” was largely improvised.

AL: Why did you decide to put the two cover tracks on the album?

BC: I’d always wanted to hear Richie Havens sing “What Have They Done to the Rain,” so when I got an opportunity to meet him, I worked up a demo for him to hear. I particularly loved the Searchers’ version of the song when I was a child, and that’s pretty much the basis of my arrangement. As for “Telstar,” I’m a Joe Meek fan, and while researching my book on Meek I learned a lot about his techniques and how he worked. My cover of “Telstar” is an homage to Meek’s genius, and although the song has been covered hundreds of times, I felt I could do a different enough take on it to justify yet another version.

AL: You have said, “I try to get unusual and interesting sounds out of the electric guitar, rather than striving to be the next guitar god.” Can you talk about how incorporated that philosophy into this project? I assume the Moog guitar helped with that.

BC: Well, that’s a convenient position to take when you aren’t a guitar god! Seriously, though, I’m not really a “guitarist” in the sense of someone who enjoys playing just for the sake of it. I played in cover bands when I was a kid, but for most of my life I have only been interested in the guitar as a tool for creating my own music, and that music has as much to do with sound as it does with guitar technique or tradition. As for incorporating that philosophy into “Hologramatron”, one thing worth noting is that other than a few bits of sampled Mellotron on two songs, all of the non-drum sounds on the album were created entirely with guitars and bass. In some cases the instruments were processed as they were being recorded and in others they were processed in post-production and during mixing—but all of the sounds are guitars of one sort or another. And much of the processing was done with Moogerfooger and Electro-Harmonix pedals and other analog devices rather than software, though the EchoBoy plug-in got lots of use. The Moog Guitar is a singular instrument, and the folks at Moog were kind enough to loan me a prototype for several months. It isn’t a synthesizer, or even a MIDI controller, but rather a unique instrument that among other things provides infinite sustain simultaneously on all strings. You can also get a huge variety of sounds by simply altering things such as finger pressure, vibrato, and attack. For example, the first part of the solo in the middle section of “Stars of Sayulita” sounds a little like a flute, but it morphs into to an oboe-like sound after a few bars. To make that transition all I did was to press a little harder on the string and add some finger vibrato. Another interesting “guitar” I used on the album was the TogaMan GuitarViol, an instrument with a curved bridge for bowing like a viol, but that’s tuned like a guitar. “Dateless Oblivion & Divine Repose” was played entirely on the GuitarViol, and I also used it to play the staccato riffs on “Suicide Train” and the tabla-like parts on “Abandoned Mines.”

AL: Do you have any favorite contemporary guitarists or musicians you are currently grooving out to?

BC: One of the many great things about my job at Guitar Player is that I receive dozens of CDs each month, so I’m exposed to a lot of great music and guitar playing. Some of the guitarists that have knocked me out with recent albums are Eivind Aarset, Alex Machacek, Mike Keneally, Vieux Farka Toure, John McLaughlin, Steve Tibbetts, Terje Rypdal, Jeff Beck, Omar Rodriguez Lopez, John Frusciante, Ralph Towner, Scott McGill, Ben Monder, Mark Wingfield, Jake Hertzog, Nels Cline, John Jorgenson, Steve Hackett, Trey Gunn, Markus Reuter, Barry Finnerty, Martin Taylor, and Julien Kasper.

AL: You have said that in interviewing rock stars, “I’ve become more knowledgeable about how they view music journalists, and I’ve picked up a few interview techniques that I can use.” Can you elaborate on that? How am I doing?

BC: If you demonstrate to an artist that you have taken the trouble to familiarize yourself with their work, and ask them fresh questions that allow them to say something new and explore ideas that interest and excite them, you are generally home free. You are doing fine, though, of course, I’m not a rock star.

AL: As someone who has worked both in music journalism and as an artist, there are a ton of issues going on in the music industry (magazines and labels evaporating, independent artists barely scraping by, piracy rising, sales dropping). Do you have any thoughts on where you see the economic model of the music industry going and how artists will make due in the future?

BC: Frankly, I don’t think anyone has any idea where the industry is headed, or even whether it will remain an “industry.” New technologies and convergences of technologies are affecting commerce and human behavior in dramatic and unpredictable ways, making it impossible to see how things will evolve even near term. One thing is certain, however: if people become unwilling to pay for music, musicians will no longer be able to survive economically, and the serpent will eventually consume its own tail. A possible solution might involve public or state support of the arts in some form, at least at the lower and intermediate levels, though that path is also fraught with potential difficulties. “Fall mountains, just don’t fall on me.”

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Barry Cleveland Interview

December 5, 2004
Barry Cleveland, News
Barry Cleveland

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Many musicians likely envy Barry Cleveland. He’s a renowned guitarist and composer with four solo CDs to his credit. He’s also an editor at Guitar Player magazine, a post that’s seen him jet across the United States to hang out with the likes of Jeff Beck, Adrian Belew, Eric Clapton and Ry Cooder. In addition, he’s the author of “Creative Music Production: Joe Meek’s Bold Techniques, the definitive tome on the career of legendary ‘60s producer Joe Meek”. To say his career in the music industry is multifaceted and rewarding is an understatement.

“Volcano”, Cleveland’s latest album, finds the San Francisco Bay Area-based musician exploring the nuances of rhythm. Drawing from a varied palette of traditions, timbres and tonalities, the disc bridges the impressionist leanings of his previous releases with a more audacious, kinetic approach. True to its name, “Volcano” is a fiery effort, full of propulsive grooves that are organically integrated into interweaving melodies and intriguing soundscapes.

During the “Volcano” sessions, Cleveland asked his sidemen, comprised of some of the Bay Area’s leading musicians, to rely on intuition when responding to his compositions. With backgrounds in jazz, folk and world music, the stellar cast, which includes bassist Michael Manring, bowhammer cymbalom player Michael Masley and percussionist Michael Pluznick, infused each piece with a myriad of influences and perspectives.

Cleveland’s two-decade association with these musicians ensured positive chemistry and a playful, creative spirit. That vibe can also be found in “Cloud Chamber”, an improvisational collective featuring Cleveland, Manring and Masley that straddles many genres, styles and moods. The band’s maverick and sometimes epic-length explorations are well-represented on “Dark Matter”, its 1998 debut CD.

Prior to “Volcano”, Cleveland released two other noteworthy albums: 1989’s “Voluntary Dreaming” and 1986’s “Mythos”. “Voluntary Dreaming” was an electronics-based album that found Cleveland performing on samplers and synths, as well as electric and acoustic guitars. It built upon the bent represented on “Mythos”, his debut CD released on Larry Fast’s highly-regarded, short-lived Audion label. Mythos took an ambient, layered guitar approach that mirrored the label’s minimalist aesthetic.

We were inundated with material during the early days of the Audion label and a few of the submissions stuck out as being a cut above the rest and Barry’s was certainly one of them, said Fast, a pioneering musician that helped shape the evolution of synthesizers in modern music. What he was writing wasn’t the same kind of repetitive, formulaic thing that a lot of the electronic acts were submitting as demos. Barry’s music was creative and unpredictable. He offered a storyline and it was one that was significantly better than your average mystery novel in which you can figure it out by page three. With Barry’s writing, you couldn’t necessarily determine where it would go next, but it always went somewhere interesting without being jarring. Barry’s music also had a wonderful soundstage and soundscape. There was a certain clarity to it. It was clear he knew what he was doing with his writing and recording. It made for a very nice package. He’s a very talented guy.

“Voluntary Dreaming” and “Mythos” have been out—of—print for years, but “Memory and Imagination”, a new double-CD collection, features most of the material, along with several unreleased pieces. “Innerviews” discussed the new compilation, “Volcano” and Cleveland’s many other musical pursuits in this in-depth conversation.

AP: Tell me about the rhythmic approach you chose for “Volcano”.

BC: Nearly all of the pieces are based on African and Afro-Haitian rhythms and the compositional process began with improvisation. I had been working with percussionist Michael Pluznick for a few years—he played on “Voluntary Dreaming” and I contributed some bits to his “Where the Rain Is Born” CD—and he gave me a DAT of about 30 all-percussion recordings to work with. I spent several months playing guitar along with the DAT, just improvising, and archiving the results on a cassette recorder. Over time, the rhythms became increasingly familiar and my improvisational responses to them more organic. The guitar improvisations were typically fairly far removed from the music that traditionally accompanies these rhythms, yet they were often oddly integrated, occasionally in surprising ways. Sometimes, complete themes or even whole sections would emerge seemingly out of the ether. More often, simple riffs and rhythmic figures would materialize, then be absorbed back into my subconscious, only to reemerge later in mutated forms. Eventually, I chose nine improvisations for further development. Another interesting aspect of the process was that most of the rhythms are associated with a particular god or goddess, and are supposed to embody that deity’s primary characteristics. I chose not to learn what those characteristics were initially, so that the rhythms themselves, rather than preconceptions, would influence the improvisations. Later, when we compared what I’d come up with to the traditional attributions, they matched up surprisingly well.

AP: Describe the choice of sidemen on the album and how their contributions helped shape the music.

BC: Most of the players are people I had worked with previously. I first played with Michael Manring when he participated in an entirely improvised Living Room Concert, recorded at my home by John Diliberto for his Echoes radio program in 1991. I was blown away by Manring’s astonishing technique and polyglot musical aesthetic-he is arguably the greatest solo bassist in the world—so naturally, I gravitated towards him when I began working on “Volcano”. As for Manring’s contributions, I worked out simple bass parts for the songs either on the guitar or a bass synth, and created mock-ups, which I gave to him a few days before the sessions. On pieces such as ‘Makanda’, ‘Tongue of Fire’ and ‘Secret Prescriptions of the Bedroom’, he played pretty much those simple lines, though he also added accompanying parts, usually improvised. On Rhumbatism and Volcano, where I had already filled up the low end with bass synth parts, he just improvised around them. Manring also played some great solos, such as the Ebowed parts on Dervish Circles and Ophidian Waves, and the breathtaking runs on Rhumbatism and Volcano. Norbert Stachel—who was very active in the Bay Area music scene, but has since relocated to New York—became involved after the percussion, bass and guitar parts had already been recorded. Stachel plays all of the instruments in the flute, saxophone and clarinet families, and at the time he used to carry nearly all of them around in the cavernous trunk of an old car. I’d play him the basic tracks for each piece and suggest an instrument to record. After that, we would usually go out to his car, where he would dig around in the trunk until he found something else that might work. In several cases, he chose instruments that I would never have thought of, such as piccolo flute and contrabass clarinet, the highest and lowest of the orchestral instruments, both of which are used on Rhumbatism. Stachel also played the EWI [Electronic Wind Instrument], a woodwind synthesizer, and on Black Diamond Express, he produced the train sound that opens the piece by blowing into a conch shell. I had performed and recorded with Michael Masley for many years. He played a bow hammer cymbalom solo on Tongue of Fire when the album was originally recorded, and on Dark Energy, towards the end. He also played three of his original instruments—Reed Slide, Lakota Slide and Phenix—on Obsidian Night. Masley’s parts were entirely improvised, and he nailed most of them on the first take, which is particularly impressive when you consider that he was recorded in a shower stall to get a natural reverb effect. Lygia Ferra is now a pop singer-songwriter in Los Angeles, but she used to live in the Bay Area. Her part on Secret Prescriptions of the Bedroom was entirely improvised in what she calls Lygian-a language comprised of Italian, Iranian, Yiddish and other vocal sounds. Max Taylor joined her on Dervish Circles, which was originally going to be a vocal duet with actual words based on a poem by Rumi, but which became a real-time improvisation instead.

AP: How do you look back at “Mythos” and “Voluntary Dreaming”?

BC: They are very different recordings, each with its high points and low points. Some of the music is still interesting and engaging, and some of the pieces make me wince whenever I hear them. The music that I still like appears on disc one of the new two-CD compilation “Memory & Imagination”. The title cut on “Mythos”, which runs 20 minutes and takes up the entire second side of the LP and cassette releases, was the culmination of a way of creating music I’d been working on since I was in my teens, and it remains one of my favorite pieces. The basic idea is to record lots of improvised tracks-more than you can possibly use—and find the combinations that work at various points. It is a very labor—intensive way of working, as you have to compare all of the tracks in every combination, but the results can be compelling. In the case of ‘Mythos”, since the piece runs so long, and we didn’t have automation at the time, I would sometimes get almost to the end of the mix and then make a mistake, necessitating having to start all over again. At the time “Mythos” was recorded I had only recently met Michael Masley, and he and I improvised the basic tracks one afternoon at Spark Studios. I played guitar using a violin bow, an Ebow and various other devices-all running through two Revox A77 tape recorders configured for looping—and Michael played bow hammer cymbalom and a small xylophone. After the first pass, I wanted to get a deeper sound, so I slowed the tape down, transposing everything down a few steps and creating some huge guitar and cymbalom sounds. The remaining tracks were recorded using the slower speed as the base, providing a nice blend of timbres. We recorded additional guitar and cymbalom tracks, and later Bob Stohl and Kat Epple added several types of flutes, Lyricon and a variety of bells, cymbals and other light percussion. The other pieces on “Mythos” were more composed and arranged, though some of the solos were improvised. It is somewhat ironic that “Mythos” was released on an electronic music label, as there are no synthesizers on about half of it. When it came time to record “Voluntary Dreaming”, I was still signed to Audion, and I wanted to do something more electronic. I bought a MIDI keyboard with an onboard sequencer, and worked out the basic tracks for the pieces in my home studio. Then I took the sequences into Spark, dumped them into Performer, a computer-based MIDI sequencer, and we assigned the parts to various synthesizer and sampler modules. The synth tracks were then transferred to a 24-track analog recorder and the other parts-percussion, guitar, pedal steel guitar, cymbalom and voice-were added at Spark. I’m still happy with the majority of the pieces on “Voluntary Dreaming”. The album was scheduled for release on Audion, and an early mix of the title cut appears on the second Audion sampler CD, but the label imploded before the project was completed. Fortunately, I got another deal shortly thereafter.

AP: Reflect on the heady days of Audion and getting signed by Larry Fast.

BC: performed at a benefit for WFMU in New Jersey back in 1984, where I met Richard Ginsburg, a DJ with a program called Synthetic Pleasure. I gave Ritchie a tape of “Mythos”, and he not only played it on his program, he offered to send copies to artists such as Brian Eno, Klaus Schultz and Larry Fast on my behalf. I received a very nice letter from Fast saying that “Mythos” was one of the most interesting-sounding projects he had heard in a long time, and that he enjoyed the music, but that he was only an artist and couldn’t really get me a deal. About a year later, Fast was asked to become head of A&R for a new label being started by JEM / Passport Records, which had released all of his “Synergy” album. The president, Marty Scott, wanted to create what he referred to as an electronic Windham Hill, in order to capitalize on the burgeoning new age genre. Fast contacted me and said that he’d like to release “Mythos” on the new label. “Mythos” was one of the first three records released on Audion. JEM took out full page color ads in Billboard, Musician and other mainstream magazines in order to establish the label, so I benefited from the heavy exposure. It also meant that my record got reviewed in quite a few important magazines, which was very fortunate. It was chosen as one of the 25 Best New Age CDs in Stereo Review, alongside such other new age recordings as “Dark Side of the Moon”, and received very favorable press in Option, Jazziz, Electronic Musician, CD Review, among others. Things went very well for about a year. The label signed some great artists, and there were plans to combine Audion with the E.G. Editions label. But when JEM/Passport attempted to merge with Enigma Records, the word got out that there was a lot of funny business with the books, and a few weeks later they were out of business. Audion, Passport and several other sister labels were doing well, but they all went down with the parent company.

AP: Tell me about the distance traveled between Voluntary Dreaming and Volcano.

BC: When I recorded “Voluntary Dreaming”, I wanted to do something more electronic, to fit the format of the Audion label. I played all of the keyboard and guitar parts, and even a little percussion, so the CD is mostly myself and Michael Pluznick, with contributions from other artists on a few of the pieces. When it came time to do the next project, I decided to go in the opposite direction and not use any sequencing or synthesizers. I did wind up using a few synths here and there, but 95 percent of  “Volcano” is actual people playing non-synthesized instruments, so it sounds completely different than “Voluntary Dreaming”. I still wrote all of the music, but the contributions from other players were far more extensive and significant than was the case on “Voluntary Dreaming”.

AP: Do you have a specific philosophy when it comes to guitar playing?

BC: try to get unusual and interesting sounds out of the electric guitar, rather than striving to be the next guitar god. Besides using a lot of electronic processing, I also play with an Ebow, a Chinese Erhu bow and a set of Masley Bow hammers designed especially for the guitar. Then, once I have recorded the guitar parts, I often take great liberties in processing them even more, and sometimes what I wind up with is not really recognizable as guitar at all.

For example, occasionally people would ask me why there were so few guitar parts on “Mythos”, or even if there were any guitar parts at all. When I explained that about 60 percent of the sounds on the piece were created using guitars, they would often be incredulous. On “Voluntary Dreaming” many of the guitar parts are more easily identifiable, as the electronic sounds were produced using synths and samplers rather than processed guitar. On “Volcano”, there is a fairly even mix of processed and more conventional guitar sounds. Since the pieces were composed while playing guitar along with the rhythm tracks, and I was usually using clean sounds at the time, I wound up using those same sounds on the basic tracks. There’s a lot of studio funny business on the overdubs, but for the most part, the basic tracks are clearly recognizable as guitar. Also, I wanted to use a wider variety of guitar tones than I had previously, so I played a PRS Custom-24 guitar in addition to my old Les Paul Custom. The PRS gave me a whole new palate of sounds, as well as a whammy bar, to work with. On Disc Two of  “Memory & Imagination”, all of the sounds, except for percussion, were produced by guitar-and many of them were very heavily processed, sometimes totally beyond recognition.

AP: Tell me a little about your musical beginnings and pre-“Mythos” projects.

BC: After attending a school band promotion while in fourth grade, I asked my parents if I could take saxophone lessons. My mother didn’t think it was a bad idea, but my father was very much opposed. Many years later, I learned that my father had attempted to play the sax when he was a boy, but that he’d never got much beyond annoying the neighbors. I pursued scientific interests instead—astronomy, entomology, toy rockets, etcetera-until I saw the Beatles and decided that rock star was a potentially more rewarding career choice. I got a ukulele when I was about 11, soon progressed to an acoustic guitar, and about six months later got an electric semi-hollow Japanese instrument. Soon, I was working out all sorts of pop and rock songs. My first live performance was a solo gig at a junior high school happening—it was the ‘60s—where I played a noisy, mostly improvised piece of original music with my amp’s vibrato and spring reverb effects cranked way up. Next, I formed a band with three friends, and we played a lot of Led Zeppelin, Cream, Beck, Hendrix and other heavy guitar-oriented music. By the time I was in high school, I was playing in bars and clubs with much older musicians, and my musical tastes had expanded to include progressive bands such as King Crimson, Yes, Genesis, Pink Floyd, Spirit and Van der Graaf Generator. During my college years, I listened to a lot of ECM jazz-my favorites were Terje Rypdal and Barre Phillips-along with Mahavishnu, Miles, Weather Report, Oregon, etcetera. All of this music influenced my playing to some extent, particularly sonically. By the early ‘70s, I was using tape echo units, spring reverbs, fuzzes, wahs, phasers, flangers and anything else I could get my hands on. We even had a Mellotron in one of the groups I worked with. I also studied electronic music briefly with Larry Austin, where I was exposed to the music of Stockhausen, Subotnick, Schaeffer, Ussachevsky and other pioneers, as well as having a chance to fool around with modular Moog synths, tape loop racks and other esoteric gear. When I left college in 1978, I joined an eight—piece funk and soul band called Devastation. There were three guys up front that sang harmony vocals and played horns, and a guy who played a Hammond B3 and a Fender Rhodes piano. I was part of the rhythm section. We played all over the southeastern U.S. doing mostly one-nighters, and although it was quite an education for a kid fresh out of college, after a year I was sick of touring, so I quit and moved to California. In the early ‘80s, I began learning more about studio recording-producing some radio dramas among other things-and I worked briefly with several groups, including a new age ensemble called Emerald Web, and an improvisational instrumental duo with Michael Masley called Thin Ice. In 1981 I recorded an album called “Stones of Precious Water” that was released on cassette by a small Canadian label a few years later. “Mythos” was recorded in 1984, and was the first project I recorded in a professional studio.

AP: You’re in the unique position of being both a music journalist and artist. How has each experience informed your understanding of the other?

BC: While I was writing for Mix, Electronic Musician and Onstage, I was mostly covering gear and recording, rather than interviewing artists. Since I’ve been an associate editor at Guitar Player, however, I’ve done dozens of artist interviews—though, of course, they are only with guitarists, and tend to focus on music from that perspective. Besides being able to pick the minds of some of the greatest pickers in the world, I’ve become more knowledgeable about how they view music journalists, and I’ve picked up a few interview techniques that I can use. On a more practical level, I’ve come to appreciate the conditions under which music journalists operate-with the exception of those such as yourself, who operate independently of the corporate publishing industry—and that’s made it easier for me to understand why they do many of the things they do. When you’re dealing with extremely tight deadlines, attempting to provide balanced coverage across genres, and trying to keep the newsstand and subscription sales robust, it is necessary to have a very different perspective than you might have as purely a music listener. Conversely, having had my music covered and reviewed by journalists over the years has necessarily provided me with an artist’s perspective, making me generally more sensitive to the artists I write about.

AP: What is your opinion of the state of music journalism today?

BC: Music journalism is typically serviceable and occasionally excellent-but all too often it’s superficial, and in many cases, obviously affected by the restraints of the corporate publishing industry. My personal peeve is when lazy journalists who do not adequately research their subjects, or listen critically to the music being considered, unreservedly offer up half—baked and often sweeping evaluations. My advice to music journalists is to imagine that the artist is there with them in the room, and if their writing is critical of that artist, to be certain that they’d have the balls to read their work aloud to them before publishing it.

AP: The composer Witold Lutoslawski once said: People whose sensibility is destroyed by music in trains, airports and lifts, cannot concentrate on a Beethoven Quartet. What do you make of music as a commercial conditioning device and its effect on the public’s ability to appreciate this art form as a serious endeavor?

BC: There are numerous factors that serve to diminish the average contemporary listener’s ability to concentrate in general, such as stress, diet, exercise, age and physical environment. I’m not sure how you would determine to what extent a particular case is related specifically to background and other programmatic music. And, given that concentrating on-or at least comprehending—Beethoven’s music requires some specialized education, the average listener would probably experience difficulty anyway. That said, I feel that overexposure to information of all types, sonic or otherwise, can lead to numbness and the inability to differentiate the useful from the irrelevant. Viewed from a more positive angle, the use of a wide variety of music in commercials and films, for example, can sometimes be educational. These days, the hunger for ever-more exotic sounds, often culled from the music of distant cultures, can result in the expansion of the listener’s musical awareness. We live in a time when the borders between cultures and societies are becoming less distinct, and we are exposed to a wider variety of music than at any other time in history. One result of this is the emergence of hybrid musical forms that incorporate elements from all over the globe, whether absorbed consciously or unconsciously, and I find that quite exciting. Volcano is an example of this.

AP: What’s coming up for you?

BC: have recently converted my studio from analog to computer-based recording, and I’m exploring the many possibilities that technology provides. I’ve also been doing a lot of work with looping. I’ve stockpiled hundreds of loops that I hope to incorporate into my new works. I have several projects in the works—including a spoken word and music CD with Seattle poet Craig Van Riper and a second “Cloud Chamber” CD-but beyond those, I’m only starting to get an inkling of what’s to come. It’ll most likely be really noisy, though, whatever it is.

Copyright 2004 by Anil Prasad. All rights reserved. Originally published on “Innerviews”. Reproduced with permission.

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