This is the interview I've done for one music portal prior to Jean-Luc Ponty's concert with pianist William Lecomte in Zagreb on March 10, 2016. Note that I don't have much experience with doing this, and some quite dumb questions popped up here and there.
- Most of Your short biographies I bumped into mention that
You first played clarinet and tenor sax at jazz jams, and ended up playing
violin in jazz context accidentally after coming to club only with Your violin
case. Do You still sometimes play these instruments, or any other, apart from
violin and keyboards?
JLP: I love clarinet
and at times have been thinking about playing it again, but I already have so
much to do every day that it would take time from practicing violin which is
more important.
- I've heard the rumour that another classically trained
violinist, Dave Arbus from progressive rock group East of Eden, didn't consider
playing violin in jazz/rock context, and instead focused on saxophone and
flute, but changed his mind after seeing You on stage. Have You already heard
that anecdote, and do You know something more about it?
JLP: No, I did not
know about Dave Arbus, but other jazz violinists like Michael Urbaniak from
Poland, Regina Carter and a younger guy Evan Fourness and others in the jazz
and rock worlds have told me that I inspired them, and not just violinists. It
makes me very happy to know that what I started will not stop with me.
- How did You get the chance to record ˝Jazz Violin Summit˝
with legendary swing violinists Stephane Grapelli and Stuff Smith early in Your
career?
JLP: I think I was 24
years old when I recorded that album, and since I was 21 I was invited to play
all over Western Europe and especially in Germany where the producer of that
first Violin Summit invited to be part of it. I had played with both Grappelli
and Stuff Smith separately before and was thrilled to be part of this project with
these established masters.
- It seems to me that Your first encounter with America was
Your frequent collaborator and the great late keyboard player George Duke. Can
You tell us how do You remember Mr. Duke, and what was working with him like?
JLP: First a record
producer from Los Angeles signed me to his label when he heard me play at the
Monterey Jazz Festival in California in 1967, where I performed with The Modern
Jazz Quartet lead by pianist-composer John Lewis. So when I went to Los Angeles
in 1968 I needed a band to record albums for that label and also perform in
clubs and jazz festivals, and this record producer recommended a young unkown
pianist who had sent him a demo, it was George Duke. The first night we played
in a club it was like we had played together for years, instant musical communication.
He was super talented, intelligent and always positive and jovial. When I first
collaborated with Frank Zappa I demanded that George be part of it, which is
how Frank discovered him, and he liked his playing and singing so much that he
hired him in his band when I returned to France.
- Frank Zappa's concert recordings from a period when he
played with such a distinctive personas as You, George Duke, Bruce Fowler, Ian
and Ruth Underwood are among my favorite live tapes I got the chance to hear,
but on ˝Over-Nite Sensation˝, the official studio record from that period, it
seems that the instrumental potential of that marvelous line-up was stripped
down, and the overall sound was more poppy, despite it ended up being a pretty
good album with some great moments. Can You tell us how did that happen? Was it
due to some sort of marketing pressure?
JLP: Zappa never gave
up to marketing pressure, he had his own record label distributed by Warner,
which was a revolutionary concept at the time, so he was free to record what he
wanted, but he was attentive to his audience which he was loosing when playing
too much of his complex instrumental compositions.
- I've heard that You were John McLaughlin's first choice as
a violinist for the first line-up of Mahavishnu Orchestra, but You came to the
group later, after Jerry Goodman left. Why did You turn down the offer the
first time?
JLP: I never received
the offer.....(laughs) .....they had no money when they first started and their
manager said it was too expensive to bring me over from France, so they
searched for another violinist in America and Jerry Goodman was a great choice.
Then I moved permanently to California in 1973 and John asked me to join his
new Mahavishnu Orchestra a year after.
- How did You experience recording Mahavishnu Orchestra's
„Apocalypse“ with the London Symphony?
JLP: I loved John's
revolutionary compositions and it was fantastic playing this music in London in
one of the most famous recording studios with the best equipment, with one of
the top symphony orchestras in the world, working with George Martin who had
produced the Beatles, very talented, such a nice man with a lot of class, he
loved French wine and we had a few dringks together. He called me later to
record on an album he was producing for Paul McCartney but I was not available.
Thanks to my experience with classical music I was able to help musical
communications with the American orchestra conductor Michael Tilson Thomas.
- Can we get short comparison between Frank Zappa's and John
McLaughlin's attitudes and habits during the rehearsals, shows, etc?
JLP: Both felt very
strongly about their respective musical concepts and knew how to get a band to
play their music, which is not always easy when the music is so new and
original that only its creator knows how it's supposed to sound. Yet there was
more freedom with McLaughlin than with Zappa who was a real perfectionist and
had us rehearse all the time even while on tour.
- Since mid seventies there have been significant influence
by progressive rock in Your music, and recently You started a collaboration
with prog giant Jon Anderson from Yes. What was Your first encounter with that
kind of music?
JLP: My first
discovery of prog. rock was when I met musicians from Soft Machine in London in
the late 60s, I also played and toured with their drummer Robert Wyatt. Then I
discovered bands like Genesis, King Crimson and Yes soon after I moved to Los
Angeles in 1973, and met Jon Anderson a couple of times in America in the 70s
and 80s.
- Vital part of Your fusion classics such as ˝Imaginary
Voyage˝, ˝Enigmatic Ocean˝, and ˝Mystical Adventures˝ were multi-part suites.
What moved You to write those pieces, and are You still sometimes composing
such an ambitious material?
JLP: As soon as I
started composing it was obvious that my roots were first of all in classical
music, I could hear the influence of French impressionnists and modern European
composers, and I noticed that if I composed all the music for an entire album
at the same time, there was a unity of style that made it possible to let it
flow as long structures like symphonies. It sill write pieces that will develop
into different sections, but within a shorter time frame, like a mini modern
concerto.
- One of the most surprising moments in Your career for us
listeners was the album ˝Tchokola˝ recorded with West African musicians. How
did You decide to make such an album, and do You consider doing something
similar in the future?
JLP: It was during a
tour in Europe with my American band that discovered modern African music from
West African musicians who had emigrated to Paris in the mid-80s. Some were
fans of my music and I jammed with a few in Paris to discover their rhythms ,
so rich and so different from one country to another. I loved it and decided to
do an album and brought them to America for an 8-week tour. It was a special
project which I saw as one-time cultural exchange, then I returned to my own
culture which is how it should be, although mine is a mix of European and
American traditions, as I spent my whole life in these two environments.
- Do You have any future plans with Anderson Ponty Band?
JLP: Yes we did a
tour in America in the Fall 2015, and plan to tour there again in May-June this
year. Perhaps do more recordings together, we'll see. Jon and I really enjoy this
collaboration.
- How did You decide to electrify Your violin, and start
playing it more like an electric guitar or synthesizer?
JLP: It was first to
get more volume when playing in a band with drums. Then the sound was so
different that I decided to develop it into a new one, and experiment with
sound effects which was exciting because never heard before.
- What effects are You mostly using on electric violin?
JLP: Phaser, chorus,
flanging and echo delays.
- Can You name a few contemporary violinists (no matter
whether they play classical, jazz, rock...) that You particularly appreciate?
JLP: Yes.....I really
like Chris Howes from Cincinnnati because his playing concept is very close to
mine while being original and intensely emotional, also Regina Carter and the
young Black American Evan Fourness both from Detroit. I like Marc O'Connor for
bluegrass, and among classical violinists my favorites are Vadim Repin, violist Yuri Bahsmet both from Russia, Joshua
Bell and Hilary Han from America, I know all of hem personally, and from India the
two brothers L. Subramaniam and L. Shankar.
- Are You listening to some music (apart from that You're
playing) these days? Do You find any of today's artists specifically
interesting?
JLP: I listen very
rarely to my albums, for me it is like looking at pictures of myself, once or
twice is enough, music is a live experience and my desire is to keep creating, I
am so busy every day that I have very little time to listen to music but when I
can it's mostly classical music.
- And finally, what can the audience in Zagreb expect from
Your performance with William Lecomte?
JLP: We play a mix of
pieces, going from the 80s like 'Final Truth' from the album Mystical
Adventures, to my most recent compositions. Pieces that work very well without
bass and drums, I enjoy duo this format once in a while, where you can really
savour the richness of the sound of just two instruments at a time, the idea
came while rehearsing without the rhythm section, some of my pieces sounded
great with just violin and keyboards, it is more intense to perform this way
but it allows greater freedom of improvisation.
Thank You for answering, and I apologize for asking some
exhausting questions!
JLP: Yes indeed so
many questions....(laughs)....but you're welcome.