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Nels Cline



Last Updated: 9/24/2009

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Status: Single
City: LOS ANGELES
State: CALIFORNIA
Country: US
Signup Date: 3/20/2005

Blog Archive
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Wednesday, November 26, 2008 
Nels Cline + Devin Sarno:
Live concert video
Shot in High Def by Zak Forrest & Chad Liebenguth
From November 8, 2008 @ The Wulf (Downtown L.A.)
Check it out on Vimeo
Tuesday, June 05, 2007 


CONFECTION is perhaps, as its title suggests, a bit of a trifle.
Written quite at the last minute, it falls in with my penchant for
"instrumental hit"-style writing, and is really just an excuse to
rock out. Note nod to Deerhoof. Enjoy!

---

Visit Nels Cline's MySpace page each

Tuesday to hear an unreleased track

from Draw Breath, the new Nels Cline

Singers' Cryptogramophone CD.

Confection is currently featured



Tuesday, May 29, 2007 
RECOGNIZE II is the second of two acoustic pieces on the CD, 
and is dedicated (like "Recognize I") to my parents. It is a little 
chamber piece, and is actually in a major mode - a rarity for me. 
Both "Recognize"s are rubato with tiny passages in tempo, or 
allusions to time. Devin and Scott really GOT these pieces - their 
simplicity is misleading - and I am so lucky to be able to play 
with them.
Tuesday, May 22, 2007 

MIXED MESSAGE had the working title of "The Megasuite" for quite

awhile, and it is in 3 distinct sections. The opening is meant to directly

reference late-period Coltrane, and supplies the band with only a set

of 5 chords to "blow" on, followed by an ascending line and a grand

pause in a set of 3. Then, the murky middle section is a feature for

Scott's electronics, with the built-in limitation that he must not use actual

drum sounds or pre-load his looping devices, but rather grab the last

gasp of air/sound from the end of the first movement and utilize it as

the basis for his "solo", or improvisation. Devin and I play a low,

slow, clustery 3/4 part with periodic pauses. Then it's off to the rock

'em sock'em conclusion, which is -YES - rather like King Crimson circa

'72-meets-Husker Du or something. I am actually uncharacteristically

pleased with my solo here, which is comprised of only a tidbit of

soloing then a series of loops and loop modifications, all done 'live'.

As for the title, like most of my titles that may be cliches of speech

or one word, it is meant to have more than one meaning.

Tuesday, May 15, 2007 

CAVED-IN HEART BLUES was written while I was
sitting around the Wilco loft in Chicago, playing with
a lot of reverb. The title is actually literal. It IS a blues,
but only one trip through 1-4-5-4-1. As for the caved-in
heart part, well, I am pretty sure that most humans can
get a feeling or idea about that image/sensation. I play
my beloved Jerry Jones baritone guitar on the main body
of the piece, and the psych blues collage is lap steel and
6-string electric looped, reversed, delayed, etc., along
with Scott's electronics and Devin's arco bass harmonics
and textures. I think of this as being in the mood and tradition
of the work song. Our version, anyway.


Saturday, April 21, 2007 
I am sitting here in Sydney, Australia. April 20th would have been my father's 92nd birthday, were he still alive. And Andrew Hill has died. As most of you know, I love his music. I recorded some of his pieces on my CD, released last year, called NEW MONASTERY: A View Into the Music of Andrew Hill (Cryptogramophone). I recorded it as a tribute to a LIVING MASTER and inspiration. I didn't know it when I came up with the idea to do the project, but Andrew Hill was gravely ill. Now he is released from suffering. His years-long struggle with lung cancer is over. I write this to send my love and condolences to his family and friends, and to send all possible love to the spirit of Andrew Hill. In a strange twist of fate, my sextet that plays his music was asked to open for Mr. Hill's group at the San Francisco Jazz Festival last October. It was nerve-wracking for me, but also exciting, and Andrew was generous, telling me, after I expressed a sheepishness about playing his music in front of him, that what was important was that I was doing MY interpretation - that that's what it's all about. He also said, more than once, in a voice that was becoming increasingly tiny from his fight to live, "And I really like what you are doing with the accordion", referring to Andrea Parkins' contribution. Accordion was Andrew Hill's first instrument, which he apparently played on the streets of Chicago as a lad.... This sextet of mine also played last month in New York, the same week that Mr. Hill played what was probably his last concert. It was a free afternoon event at The Trinity Church. I was way uptown at Colunbia University shilling for my band's gigs on the radio, and had no idea until it was too late that he was going to play this concert of what he was calling "ecclesiastical music" with his trio. I learned that Andrew's health had become even worse, that he could barely speak. I missed the concert, but I think it may still be streaming as a film document on the Internet. I suggest you seek it out. I suggest that you seek out all of Andrew Hill's music. It is visionary, unpredictable, wide-ranging in approach, loose-limbed yet articulate, and as I have said before, much like the man: beautiful and free. Love to you, Andrew Hill. Love to your family. The music you made lives on. In loving memory.
Friday, September 22, 2006 
"New Monastery : a view into the music of Andrew Hill" is the latest release from Nels Cline on Cryptogramophone Records. The CD features Bobby Bradford, Ben Goldberg, Andrea Parkins, Scott Amendola, Devin Hoff & Alex Cline. It will be released on Sept 26 & is available NOW on iTunes. Here are liner notes from Nels explaining his take on this record:

Perhaps it will be a letdown for me to say this, but this is not a tribute record in the conventional sense. It is not intended as a definitive sampling of the works of a genuine original, Mr. Andrew Hill. There may even be wrong or strange notes here and there. I transcribed everything from the recordings before arranging it, and Im no wizard!

On seperate occasions, Andrea Parkins and Ben Goldberg had been guests with my regular trio, The Nels Cline Singers (with Devin Hoff and Scott Amendola). Andrea had played with us in Los Angeles, lending her wild and woolly accordion to the occasion, heightening the mayhem. Ben played with us in Berkeley on a more low-key affair, and the set included pieces by Jimmy Giuffre, Carla Bley, and Thelonius Monk, as well as some by me. It occurred to me that an ensemble with The Singers plus Andrea and Ben would be of interest, and I immediately began scheming to play music with them that was not written by me, but rather written by someone among us today, still working and growing and perhaps under-appreciated, whose music was flexible and varied enough to allow us latitude to explore it and be OURSELVES. It took about 3 or 4 seconds for me to come up with that composers name: Andrew Hill. As I studied the music with this in mind, I realized that I needed a brass player. I called Bobby Bradford, an old friend and inspiration, and I was delighted that he was excited about the project. Bobby and I had played together on and off for years, but had never had an opportunity to record together. So a sextet, albeit a slightly odd one, would do our take on Andrew Hill music - not attempting to be in any way definitive, nor to recreate classic sessions. It is a view - ONE VIEW - into the music of Andrew Hill.

Mr. Hill, whom I had met briefly while playing at the jazz festival in Skopje, Macedonia with Gregg Bendians Interzone back in 1997, is a delightful man to meet, but crucially he is an artist whose music has continued to change and expand its parameters, becoming freer than the early, classic Blue Note sessions. Mr. Hills music has always been unpredictable, perhaps a bit knotty, always forward-looking and beautiful. And, as I was to learn, he had managed to be quite under-the-radar for any but the most ardent jazz-o-phile. It would be a great feeling to send a little energy from the younger listeners his way. Some of his pieces, like No Doubt and McNeil Island attempted here, are like chamber works and have rarely (if ever) been covered by anyone else. Others are more recent, like Not Sa No Sa, which, though whimsical at times, is episodic - an aspect of Mr. Hills composing that began as early as the piece Spectrum on the classic album Point of Departure.

It was important to me that this record at least allude to Andrew Hills total oeuvre - there are so many compositions that it would be impossible to do otherwise! But the reason for this is to point to ALL the work, work still being produced, work that is open and part of a living tradition. With these points in mind, I decided to play a lot of the pieces as suites. It seemed like a natural way for the group to play, it reflected the methodology of a lot of Mr. Hills music, and it enabled me to squeeze more music into this document. I endeavored also to vary the tone or mood of the repetoire. Andrew Hills music touches on almost every musical mood or sensation. To Yokada Yokada I rather slyly added the The Rumproller just to be fun, to have fun with the material. In other areas, darkness may descend, or it may just be time to jam out! Also, with the exception of Dedication and Yokada Yokada/The Rumproller, we generally eschewed playing on changes, instead favoring a free approach. This is not only how we all tend to play naturally, but it is also the approach that Andrew Hills music has favored for many decades now. My brother Alex was brought in to supply the percussion drive and color needed for the turbulent Compulsion - one of my personal favorite Hill pieces, here given an almost apocalyptic treatment - and he stayed for Dedication.

There were things that I did not know before embarking on this project. I did not know that Mr. Hill was about to enjoy a resurgence of sorts, once again recording for the Blue Note label. Great news! I didnt know that Mr. Hill is seriously ill, fighting cancer. Terrible news! Smaller items: I learned that Ben Goldberg had played with Mr. Hill and that he loves this music. I learned that accordion was Andrews first instrument! But with all these rather charged revelations floating around, I hope that the real revelation will simply be the music itself: Andrew Hill music. We can approach it, twist it a bit, look into it, try it out, find beauty and inspiration, find OURSELVES as well as the genius who created it in the first place. Right?

Thanks to all the musicians for making this concept a reality as well as a beautiful experience. This record could not have happened without the enthusiastic support of my good friend Jeff Gauthier. As usual, he is THE MAN. Thanks also to Michael Cuscuna, who proved a valuable source for information and impressions, and who was always amazingly approachable in musical and in business-related matters. Thanks also to Rich Breen, Bob Hurwitz, Ron Horton, Marty Ehrlich, Paul Junior Garrison, Adam Rosenkrantz, Los Wilcos y Compadres, the Crypto clan, kind listeners and gentle comrades everywhere.

Special thanks to the visionary artistry of Mr. Andrew Hill. Long may he create and inspire. - N.C. 6/13/06