| About us | Interviews | Texts | Links | Contact | srpskohrvatski balkanimprov (musicians index) || otompotom (netlabel) |
||||
Alessandro Bosetti |
Interview: Bhob Rainey (2007)
[not answered] I am merely trying to find a music that seems truthful and useful to me. It only becomes
an experiment because that process involves so much groping in the dark. The process of improvisation bleeds into your entire life. It is an extraordinary
challenge full of compromises. And it is also as everyday as a tube of toothpaste. It's
pretty hard to turn your back on that, once you've had a taste. Planning is a desperate attempt to cover your ass when things get rough. If you happen
to spontaneously execute a plan, you're lucky. If you engage a plan to avoid appearing
weak or uninteresting, you'll be ashamed of yourself soon enough. I don't think specific sounds are terribly critical to an improvisation. In fact, I
think there is considerably too much emphasis on single sounds at the expense of overall
musical ideas in improvisation. If a new sound happens to emerge during an
improvisation, sure, that's an exciting event. But I don't beat myself up for using a
sound one thousand shows in a row. A live improvisation is a charismatic event, regardless of the performer's position on
audience/performer hierarchies. There are times when you are just sucked in. At those
points, you are in the worst position to evaluate why something is working. It's the
duds that give rise to plenty of theories and often spark the most heated debates.
Sometimes, these debates can turn a dud judgment into a new obsession. So, we rely on
the old medicine man magic, and we rely on the failures. We probably do best when our
evaluations are as ephemeral as our improvisations. [not answered]
|
|||
| addlimb.org, 2007, 2008 |
||||