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Alessandro Bosetti |
Interview: Reuben Radding (2007)
My main bass is a 100 year-old no-name Hungarian. It's a dark reddish brown, and a dark sound as well. It's a little big for me, but I'm addicted to its tone. To be a bassist you have to really be in love with the whole thing of it, carrying it, the difficulties of it. Strangers on the street will see you lugging this monster around and say "I'll bet you wish you played the flute," but we really don't. There is a special feeling of power playing bass in an ensemble. You have a great affect on how everyone else sounds. I used to resist the word "experimental," because it seemed to imply that what we do isn't intentional or is only about the process, rather than the product. Nowadays I very much embrace the word "experimental," for many of the same reasons that I previously distrusted it. As a music-maker, and as a listener, the stuff that really feels alive to me is usually improvised. I first experienced group improvisation as a songwriting tool in my youth (rock bands), and it always felt to me like the songs we made from our improvisations were inferior to the jams themselves. There is something to me about being in the moment, to be creating, rather than merely performing. All improvisers have our bags of tricks we rely on and sometimes we lean on those, sometimes not. Hopefully not. I used to be more interested in devising strategies and alternative scores, graphic or text-based, to fuel improvisations, but I think this has had more to do with the desire to have a music I could call "my music" than anything else. Ego stuff. I may not be 100% finished with composition, but hopefully not for purposes of careerism. It's hard not to be frustrated with all the support out there for new composition, while improvisation receives nothing, but it doesn't make me run to the pen. I'd much rather play a bad improvisation than a bad composition any time. I practice technique on my instrument, and since I make my living as a freelance bassist, I usually am practicing music I'll be playing that week for gigs, but I don't generally rehearse improvisations. I used to worry about repeating sounds and ideas in my improvisations, but less now that I've come to realize how valid it is, or perhaps how little it matters. A difficult question! No one knows how to decide to make a good improvised piece of music, and what that would consist of, but most will agree when they've heard or taken part in one. It seems to have a lot to do with form and freshness. I don't think this affects my playing much at all. I began recording at the very beginning of being a musician and almost 30 years later it is what it is.
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| addlimb.org, 2007, 2008 |
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