JOHN McLAUGHLIN INTERVIEWED (2009): Has guitars, will travel

 |   |  15 min read

John McLaughlin: We Will Meet Again (from the album McLaughlin Plays Bill Evans, 1993)
JOHN McLAUGHLIN INTERVIEWED (2009): Has guitars, will travel

"I'm still at the beginning of my life and career,” says 67-year old guitarist John McLaughlin. “I dont really think much about what Ive done, I dont have much time to think about what Ive done.

“Its a worn out phrase, but today is a brand new day and there is a lot to do -- but the great thing about music is you very quickly learn humility when you are learning an instrument, because you very quickly see how incapable you are and how obscure we are about our feelings.

“This is one of the great lessons that music gives us. It brings us down to our real size. And it doesnt ever stop if you are musician, whether you are 16 or 67 as I am now -- which seems very, very bizarre to me because I am still 29. We hippies never make it to 30.”

And the personable McLaughlin laughs very loudly.

While you can understand where he is coming from in a broadly philosophical sense -- and a conversation with McLaughlin can be very broad and very philosophical -- it is hard to see his career as still at the beginning since it began exactly 60 years ago when an older brother gave him an acoustic guitar.

Encouraged by his mother, an amateur violinist, he took piano lessons at nine . . . . but his musical influences (aside from the epiphany of hearing Beethoven's Ninth Symphony on the BBC) were all blues guitarists. He fell in love with the blues of Muddy Waters and Big Bill Broonzy ("it grabbed me right away, it had a tremendous gravity") and he began learning chords from his older brothers.

He moved on to hard Chicago blues and when he was 14 heard Django Reinhardt and flamenco music.

Jazz started to enter his world (Tal Farlow was my real hero, he told Downbeat magazine in the early Eighties) and discovered Miles Davis albums, then Eric Dolphy and John Coltrane.

He moved to London from his home in Yorkshire and by 1964 he had worked with the jazz wing of the British blues revival as a member of Georgie Fame's Blue Flames, the Graham Bond Organisation (with Jack Bruce and Ginger Baker, later of Cream) and Brian Auger's Trinity.

In the years before the triumvirate of Eric Clapton, Jeff Beck and Jimmy Page brought virtuoso playing into rock in the Sixties, McLaughlin had become a jazz-rock genius, but out on the periphery. 

He edged towards the experimental when playing with avant-garde saxophonist John Surman with whom he recorded Extrapolation in 1969, and it was while jamming at Ronnie Scott's club he was spotted by drummer Jack DeJohnette who recommended him to fellow drummer and Miles Davis alumnus Tony Williams. 

McLaughlin went to New York to join up with Williams and organist Larry Williams to form Tony Williams' Lifetime, but within days was playing on the Miles Davis’s seminal album of 69, In A Silent Way.

He subsequently played on sessions for the Davis albums Bitches Brew, On The Corner, Big Fun and A Tribute to Jack Johnson but was also in demand as a session player (the Stones in rock, Wayne Shorter and others in jazz).

He launched his solo career with two albums on a label run by the late Jimi Hendrix’s friend and mentor Alan Douglas. The first of these, Devotion in 1970, Douglas rightly considers the first jazz-fusion record. Of the second, My Goal's Beyond, Rolling Stone critic Robert Palmer wrote, "His solos on the first side reveal an awesome technique and an over-riding concern with shimmering melodic substance and harmonic ingenuity." (The album was re-issued in the late 80s when Bruce Lundvall established the Elektra-Musician label and grabbed it for his schedule.)

maha1

 

   Then McLaughlin established the Mahavishnu Orchestra in which set brain-finger speed record for guitarists. This was jazz-rock fusion played with often blinding intensity and energy, and in the early 90s Douglas observed, “McLaughlin produced the kind of music that, had he lived, Hendrix might have pursued, a far reaching spiritual celebration of rock, jazz, blues and Eastern-influenced sounds”.

   Ever restless, McLaughlin collaborated with Carlos Santana; explored the new possibilities of the guitar synthesiser ("The synthesiser world opens the door to musical infinity," he told Time in 1975; and founded the acoustic Indo-jazz group Shakti in the mid 70s with tabla player Zakir Hussain.

Critical opinion of their self-titled debut in '75 was divided: Gordon McLaughlin, when faced with the choice of playing the second side or throwing it out the window wrote, "Darn' thing must have sailed 70 yards".

The follow-ups Handful of Beauty ("this music takes you away into a land of the imagination, of bartered energies and climactic euphoria," wrote Downbeat) and Natural Elements ("the third and best Shakti yet, goes beyond anything McLaughlin has done in the past," said Tony Mattson in Craccum) found the guitarist at a career peak. In 1977 Downbeat rated him the fifth top player of the year. 

But he was moving on (and back to his early love of flamenco) when he linked up with Paco de Lucia and Al di Meola for a series of popular flamenco-jazz albums . . .

And so his long career goes: playing with Indian musicians and jazz giants; playing again with Davis for the Palle Mikkelborg tribute album to Davis, Aura, in the mid-Eighties; reviving Shakti to great acclaim as Remember Shakti in the late Nineties; playing tough jazz and deft acoustic ballads; and now touring in the 5 Peace Band of pianist Chick Corea, drummer Vinnie Colaiuta, bassist Christian McBride and saxophonist Kenny Garrett.

But that is merely scratching the surface because behind that extraordinary breadth of music is deeply intellectual, spiritually curious man who -- along with Santana -- became a disciple of the spiritual leader Sri Chinmoy in 1970 (who gave him the name “Mahavishnu” which means “divine compassion, power and justice“). 

maha2

 

He parted with his spiritual master in the late 70s and his acclaimed album Electric Guitarist under the name Johnny McLaughlin (which had his teenage business card on the cover) marked his coming out. One piece was an inspired reworking of Coltrane's Giant Steps with DeJohnette and Corea, elsewhere he was reunited with Williams' Lifetime, on Friendship he was joined by Santana . . . They were comfortable and relaxed superstar sessions which re-united McLaughlin with figures from his past and lead him out of the cul-de-sac of fusion.

But through his association with his guru and Indian musicians McLaughlin has explored a spiritual dimension in his playing. He also learned an amusing, self-effacement.

“I am just a working musician like anybody else and I am painfully aware of my own incapacities and limitations,” he laughs. “A musician’s life is about that very recognition. It is dedicated loving work, to quote another hippie phrase, and thats as good as it gets.

“When you play you really have to be ready for, and open to, inspiration because that really is the moment of truth. In performance inspiration comes, but if you are not ready then its really a waste.

“The instrument has to be part of your body and it has to be just a natural extension of you, and in order for that to happen you have to spend hours with your instrument, it is as simple as that. The instrument becomes part of your psycho-physical body so when inspiration comes you will not be troubled by some degree of execution of expression.

“There should be total and natural free flow -- but inspiration does not come every day, this happens just several times a year. But the point is to be ready so that it isnt wasted. When you are playing with someone and they get the spirit it is infectious: the other musicians get it, the audience gets, everybody gets it and this is consummation of music and it is magical in way.

“The whole thing about inspiration is that it is very mysterious and we have no control over it, it comes or it doesnt come. It is up to it, whether it decides to pay a visit at a particular moment.

“It sounds very Biblical, doesnt it? I dont want to sound Biblical, but music is truly the language of the spirit.”

And understanding this language and how to use it can be complex, as is listening when you are a musician.

“When I listen to music as a musician I listen on several different levels at the same time, or rather several aspects. One is just the enjoyment of the persons playing, and secondly you naturally analyse at the same time as enjoying. So there are several different functions moving simultaneously.

“When Im listening to whats going on inside of me or I start playing -- in addition to the phrasing which modifies according to the way you feel and is very indicative of your state of consciousness, you could call it a more sensual/physical side -- theres the intellectual side where for example you think about what extent harmonically you can bring in elements.

“Any note can follow any note so the question is which note?’, and that is guided by your taste in harmonics and in a way we do what is done in art as in music, it is the question of how do you taste it? People taste it how you taste it when you play it.

“When I am working, it is how to do you from A to B to C while reviewing how you perceive and how you can reveal harmonic relationships.

maha3

 

   “Harmony is part of the way of Western way of music and I am a Western musician -- despite all my work with the Indian musicians, which I will continue until I give up the ghost. But the harmonic side fascinates me more than the linear way, ‘how you can reveal different harmonic extensions in a linear sense while not losing the fundamental colour of the music?’. “

To hear McLaughlin -- who studied under Ravi Shankar, worked alongside numerous Indian musicians and had guitars built to play more effectively using Indian microtones -- describe himself as a “Western musician” is something of a surprise. Surely, given the flamenco influence in some of his work, “world musician” might be more appropriate.

“Thats sweet of you,” he laughs, “but I dont even think of myself in any terms, I am just a working musician.”

What draws McLaughlin from jazz to Indian music and back again is the common ground of improvisation in both spheres. This is challenge, the be both composer and performer in an instant, but he also sees that is a necessary part of daily life.

“I think this is one of the great lessons of life: when we are spontaneous is when we are most ourselves and the most honest, we are natural and dont have time for artifice to come in the way.

“In improvisation we dont have to time to think, just play. That’s the greatest moment because I believe if you are thinking you are not really playing, and if you are playing you are not really thinking. This is the ideal place to be in music, where you play you just be.

“There is a lot to do every day because I am not the same today as I was yesterday. In that sense every day is new and a challenge, and because Im a little different from yesterday - which is very small but over six months it can be quite substantial -- and the way you perceive music evolves and with your evolution and the music reflects that.

“The work is keeping up with whats going on inside of you, thats what my work is. I hear what is going on in my own mind and have to keep up with that.”

Not that McLaughlin is any kind of ascetic. The self-confessed Francophile has lived in Monaco for over 20 years and enjoys skiing in the nearby Alps, or popping over the border to enjoy the delights of Italy. He also has a family but is cautious about what how much expectation to put on children, especially as he has seen pushy parents up-close.

maha4

 

“I have two boys and neither are musicians although the younger one might get to it. Ive seen children ruined by parents ambitions, on a couple of occasions quite tragically. So I am not interested in forcing music on anyone because I saw these children revolt against this kind of pressure.

“Human nature is what it is and parent have stars in their eyes if their children have talent. They live their vision through their kids. I dont try to push it on mine.

“Music, my wife and I, agree should be part of any childs education until say 17 or 18, not that they should be obliged to learn an instrument, but to know music and have the possibility of being and of having access to instruments. Just like you learn French or English or mathematics, I think it should be part of any curriculum, its vitally important to the individual.”

And while placing personal emphasis on the importance of being in The Moment, he also takes the long view of his life.

“I am an extremely fortunate person, I think being a musician is a great privilege for a human being. To be involved in such work is very conducive to interior development and its a wonderful force for peace and love, if I can quote those old hippie values.

“I’m still an old hippie, very attached to my hippie values.

“But when I arrived in New York in early 69 it was primarily to play with Tony Williams, but within two days I was in the studio with Miles, and you couldnt get much luckier than that.

“And touring now with Chick is very significant because it was exactly 40 years when we met and played together on In A Silent Way. We were neighbours down in the Chelsea area of New York and weve had some white nights discussing philosophy. He is a very special human being and very special musician.”

So of “Johnny McLaughlin, electric guitarist, Railway Cuttings, Sunnyside, Yorkshire” (as that business card of his youth read) through a spiritual and musical quest which saw him creating fusion before there was the word for it, and world music a couple of decades before Womad, it is fair to ask what McLaughlin has learned in life.

“Hmmm. Ive learned that the great supreme and wonderful spirit that holds the Universe in place, and myself, are basically two aspects of the one thing. A good lesson, the only lesson, its the only one we have to figure out.

“I think we continually learn lessons, it depends on how you see lessons. I wouldnt want lessons to be in any way negative, I think they are stepping stones to where we go. Its like doubt, it is an extremely important element in life without which wed never be able to work our way through to any kind of lucidity.”

And after all this, after the amps have been turned off and the house lights go off forever?

“I think it will be a nice vacation,” he laughs. “You dont have to work and you can take it easy for a few thousand years. Were all on Death Row its just a question of time.

“But we get to a point where we have to take ‘the big sleep‘, as Raymond Chandler put it.”


CHICK COREA AND JOHN McLAUGHLIN FIVE PEACE BAND REVIEW

Aotea Centre, Auckland, New Zealand, February 22, 2009

They say never throw anything away, it’ll come back into fashion. Today, many might be regretting getting rid of their mid-70s fusion albums after this exceptional concert fronted by two of the mainsprings of that jazz-rock style, keyboard player Chick Corea and guitarist John McLaughlin.

But where 70s fusion too often disappeared up its own arpeggios, three decades on these protagonists brought a wealth of subsequent experience to expand the parameters while also reigning in the excesses.

This was -- in places -- fusion, but not as we once endured it.

On hand with these 67-year olds was a younger generation of players: saxophonist Kenny Garrett, bassist Christian McBride (who came up through the neo-conservative 80s but quickly abandoned its constraints) and the extraordinary drummer Brian Blade.

When there was fiery dialogue between these players, the enthusiastic audience witnessed an intuitive, cross-generational conference call which scaled heights and defied preconceptions.

From Corea’s richly embellished piano ballad The Disguise full of abrupt stops and directional changes (propelled by the muscular, musical and deft playing of Blade) through McLaughlin’s staccato runs, keening notes and breathtaking fluidity to Garrett’s astonishing, 10 minute flight of piercing and screaming notes which conjured up the restless spirits of Albert Ayler and Rahsaan Roland Kirk, this was jazz to be viscerally experienced.

The assured McBride brought earthy five-string electric bass to McLaughlin’s New Blues Old Bruise -- he and McLaughlin discreetly drawing the melodic pulse back to suggestions of a Chicago blues riff -- during which Garrett made references to North African music in his solo.

And if Garrett could pull out a biting and astringent tone only to wittily drop in the melody of Girl From Ipanema, Corea could equally shift from attenuated lyricism to broad flourishes before handing over to McBride for some melancholy arco playing on acoustic bass. Blade’s brilliance was everywhere, and sometimes “out there“.

This was music made by equals, much of which has been unequalled in this country.

From new fusion to an overhaul of Jackie McLean post-bop swing on Dr Jackle, from angular ballads to blues and galloping Latin rhythms, the Five Peace Band brought lifetimes of experience into the present tense.

And if at times it was a tense and intense concert -- that Garrett solo will lingers for years -- then so be it: this was jazz without compromise, invention without fear, and it was delivered by master craftsmen.

Share It

Your Comments

mark robinson - Feb 16, 2009

Excellent Graham. My phone conversation with John ran to only 20 minutes unfortuneatly (don't you hate it when those international voices come back on the line and say "you have 1 minute left").

But in those 20 minutes we covered off the menaing of life, drugs, the recent Mumbai attacks, our favorite beaches in India, Chic Corea, Miles Davis and crazy drivers in New Zealand (he was almost run over last time he was hear).

An amazing man and musician of course. If you'd like to hear my interview with John (edit down somewhat) with a music bed it is available here...nzjazznetwork.ning.com/

Alan Brown - Feb 23, 2009

Beautifully put Graham. An amazing experience, one that will stay with me for a LONG time... Lyricism, intensity, communication - such a privilege to behold.

Incredible performances from Garrett & Blade, but really, everyone knew how to support and make everyone else sound good. True musicians, true musicality, true passion. Stunning.

post a comment

More from this section   Jazz at Elsewhere articles index

JACK DeJOHNETTE (2013) From the Sixties into his 70s

JACK DeJOHNETTE (2013) From the Sixties into his 70s

If you got togther any group of contemporary jazz drummers -- "a violence of drummers" perhaps? -- it would be the rare figure in their midst who didn't name Jack DeJohnette among their... > Read more

Stefano Bollani: Joy in Spite of Everything (ECM/Ode)

Stefano Bollani: Joy in Spite of Everything (ECM/Ode)

Although this album gets credited above to the witty, inventive and very lively Italian pianist Stefano Bollani (familiar from albums with trumpeter Enrico Rava), the Danish rhythm section of... > Read more

Elsewhere at Elsewhere

CAT MOTHER AND THE ALL NIGHT NEWSBOYS. THE STREET GIVETH … AND THE STREET TAKETH AWAY, CONSIDERED (1969): The musicians not the music?

CAT MOTHER AND THE ALL NIGHT NEWSBOYS. THE STREET GIVETH … AND THE STREET TAKETH AWAY, CONSIDERED (1969): The musicians not the music?

For the moment let's not worry about the music on this old album pulled from the shelves at random for consideration in this on-going series. The music will make itself known to us as we go.... > Read more

GARBAGE; ONE MILE HIGH, a doco by ERICA FERRERO

GARBAGE; ONE MILE HIGH, a doco by ERICA FERRERO

The thing I remember most about interviewing Shirley Manson from Garbage is that I just don't remember much at all. I have recently been told it was probably in '97 and I know that it was in... > Read more